Thursday, December 19, 2019

‘We were lawless!’ Banksy’s photographer reveals their scams and scrapes

Steve Lazarides was the art renegades strategist, photographer and minder. As his shots are published, he recalls the politics, parties and soaring price tags of Matey Boy

One Christmas, Steve Lazarides and Banksy decided to kill Santa. Reject false icons, read the slogan hastily spray painted across their shopfront, behind a highly festive effigy they had created of Father Christmas dangling from a noose. Dotted around were signs intended to lure passersby into their shop, in the hope that they would join in the party and buy some artworks. The signs, however, may have had the opposite effect. Santas Ghetto, read one. Stinking art piss, read another.

There were a few complaints about what we did to Santa, says Lazarides, once Banksys right-hand man. And about the noise. We didnt care. It was a group show we did every year, so artists could make a little dough and punters could pick up some affordable art for Christmas stockings.

Lazarides worked with Banksy for 11 rollercoaster years, initially documenting the artist at work back in 1997, then becoming his agent, strategist and even minder. The Christmas art shop had been rented from one of Sohos last porn barons but disaster struck. Liquid leaked through from the floor above, soaking an impromptu chandelier made of traffic cones. I went to investigate, says Lazarides. It was a toilet overflowing. The crowd at the party thought it was part of the show. It wasnt. It was literally stinking art piss.

Each
Each armful of work would now be worth about half a million quid Steve Lazarides. Photograph: Christian Sinibaldi/The Guardian

The art he and Banksy sold at Santas Ghetto was certainly affordable back in the noughties but it could not be classified as such today. Lazarides recalls carrying armfuls of original Banksy prints to the shop, where theyd shift for 25. At todays rates, he says, I reckon each armful would be worth about half a million quid.

One work, called

Bomb Middle England
, depicted three elderly women playing bowls with balls that had lit fuses coming out of them. In 2007, Sothebys sold a version of this image for 102,000, at the time the most ever fetched for a Banksy. It has since been eclipsed, with the title now held by the 2009 painting Devolved Parliament, which went for 8.5m earlier this year.

While Lazarides is happily reminiscing about the Santas of Christmases past, Banksy is on the streets of Birmingham making art about the scandals of Christmas present in the form of his mural and video of two reindeer pulling, not Santa in his sleigh, but a homeless man called Ryan lying on a bench in the citys jewellery quarter.

How do you define greatest? says Lazarides. By money? No, by recognisability. And by that criterion, he is the greatest. Forget Warhol, forget everybody except Rembrandt and Van Gogh. Hes a genius. As proof, he cites Girl With Balloon, the painting that shredded itself moments after being sold for more than 1m at Sothebys last year. (Performance art of the highest order.) And then theres the union jack stab vest Banksy designed for Stormzys showstopping Glastonbury performance last summer.

Lazarides has now self-published a book of his photographs from the time he travelled the world tasked with making sure Banksy didnt get arrested or duffed up and didnt run out of spray paint. I had the time of my life, he says as he sits on the roof of his London office, talking about the man he calls Matey Boy. We were lawless and did just what we wanted. Matey Boy had a political agenda that you can see very clearly in everything he does, but I just had a fucking blast.

He met Banksy on an assignment for Sleaze Nation magazine, where Lazarides was a photographer. I was from Bristol like him and loved graffiti art it was for the dispossessed, those of us who didnt go to galleries or have private educations. So it was a meeting of minds from day one.

Toilet
Toilet trouble Father Christmas makes an appearance at Santas Ghetto. Photograph: Steve Lazarides

How come you two were never arrested? The secret, he says, is hi-vis jackets and traffic cones. Nobody stops you if you have them. However, there was a morning in New Yorks Meatpacking District (before it was gentrified) when a few transgender sex workers took exception to Banksy painting a wall. Some of them misconstrued what he was writing as homophobic and called the cops. Thats about as close to getting arrested as we got.

He and Banksy had various scams to help them get away with things. Once I gave him a letter saying he had permission from a film producer to paint a wall. And I would be the film producer, armed with a burner phone. If I got a call, I was primed to say, Sorry mate, I meant him to do the other side of the street.

The book is called Banksy Captured and consists of Lazarides photographs of the art worlds favourite enigma at work, whittled down from his collection of 12,000. The books first edition of 5,000 copies sold out within days of publication, promoted through Lazarides website and Instagram. Orders were processed by his fulfilment division, meaning his mum and stepdad working in a Bristol warehouse. She got made redundant from the chip shop, so this gives her another career.

Ill
Ill never give him up Banksy at work. Photograph: Steve Lazarides

Now copies of the book are selling for up to 600 on eBay. A second edition is ready go and a follow-up volume will go on sale in the new year, this time featuring Banksys work in Los Angeles and beyond. I might even do a third, says Lazarides, if I can find where the files on my hard drive have gone.

Despite the title, Lazarides hasnt actually captured Banksy himself, not 100% anyway. While the book certainly gives readers unprecedented access to the artist, we only ever see him from the rear or with a large red dot covering his face. Still, it is lovely to see arts renegade-in-chief creating, for example, that urinating guard in his bearskin hat, not to mention the row of bib-wearing chimps. Laugh now, says the message on one bib, but one day well be in charge.

Banksy has given Lazarides the go-ahead to publish these intimate images. But that brings us to the big question: who is Banksy?

Bristol artist Robin Gunningham
, Massive Attacks Robert del Naja, Gorillaz founder Jamie Hewlett, a creative collective? Ill never give him up, says Lazarides. Itd be like telling a four-year-old Santa doesnt exist. If he did reveal himself, no one would believe him. Theyd be like, Course you are, mate, course you are.

All of which makes it somewhat surprising to hear that Lazarides and Banksy dont talk any more. Was there a falling out? Not really. Im bipolar and hes obsessive. Wed gone as far as we could together. There is, I think, still a great mutual respect between us, though. There are texts, emails. We dont talk because we dont need to.

Among the pictures in the book is a shot of Londons Hayward Gallery defaced with Banksys eloquent spray-painted comment: Boring. Lazarides says: That sums up how we felt about the art world. My theory is that one of the reasons why hes the worlds most famous artist is that he isnt making people feel stupid, unlike most current art. I never got into art theory, never did a degree. And I never liked being told what I liked. So much art is about that snobbery.

Even
Even Banksy isnt really anticapitalist the artist at work, with his identity obscured. Photograph: Steve Lazarides

There are so many people working galleries who couldnt give a fuck about art, whore only in it for the money. I tested that theory recently in Hong Kong at a gallery I wont name. I said to the guy, Tell me about this painting. He said, Well, its worth $6m. Thats the art world.

In this, Lazarides is gamekeeper turned poacher. He opened his first gallery on Sohos Greek Street in 2004, later expanding his empire with two other galleries nearby. The aim, he says, was to ensure street artists he admired didnt get exploited by the art world. Know what happened to the kids who invented tagging in the 70s? They got bought up by the white-bread downtown art world and got fucked, turned into freak shows. I wanted to make sure it didnt happen again.

In this way, Lazarides turned Banksy into a

bankable commodity
for collectors and helped a whole new generation of street artists Invader, JR, Vhils, the Miaz Brothers to sell their work. Last year, he launched Lazinc in Mayfair with, reportedly, a seven-figure investment by Qatari billionaire Wissam Al Mana (the estranged husband of Janet Jackson).

How could street art be sold in Mayfair without losing its soul? When he was asked this last year, Lazarides denied that his artists sought to smash the system. Even Banksy isnt really anticapitalist, he said. This September, though, he quit Lazinc, citing art world snobbery and saying: I never wanted to sell fucking paintings. The only reason I did it was to promote a subculture that was being overlooked and is now gone.

Wheres it gone? Theres energy out there, says Lazarides. It just needs harnessing without snobbery and cynicism. Im 50 now and a boring old fart. But I want to be knocked on my ass by some 20-year-old genius. He thinks he can make that happen by getting out of Mayfair and working at it totally online, convinced that bricks-and-mortar commercial galleries have only five years left. Ive got no overheads. I can hit and run.

Hes selling prints of his photographs on his website, with prices starting at 450. Affordable art, like we did back in the day. I want to use this as a model for how to sell artists work. No third parties. Just me and the public. I can be an art world gangster again.

Banksy Captured is out now.

Original Article : HERE ;



from MetNews https://metnews.pw/we-were-lawless-banksys-photographer-reveals-their-scams-and-scrapes/

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