Who is the world's most famous living artist?
I asked ChatGPT 5.0 to tell me: "Based on global public recognition, it is Banksy. He is a superstar whose media reach is unmatched. He regularly makes global, front-page news (not just art news) for his stunts. His anonymity and political/social stunts – like shredding a painting immediately after it sold for millions of pounds – turn every new piece into a worldwide event. His work is instantly recognisable and shared virally across social media. His art is accessible, being on public walls, not in museums. By placing his art on streets and bridges, it is seen by millions of people who will never set foot in a gallery. His style is iconic; the instantly recognisable stencils – Girl with Balloon, rats, chimps with signs. His signature stencil style is referenced in pop culture, making his visual brand ubiquitous."
I asked Google Gemini 2.5 for a second opinion: "If I had to go for one living artist, based on general public recognition, it would be Banksy. His fame is driven by factors that go beyond the museum circuit: Anonymity – the mystery of his identity generates continuous global media coverage. Accessibility: His art appears in public spaces (streets, walls), making it accessible to millions without needing a museum ticket. Viral content: His works are inherently political, witty, and highly photographic, making them go viral on social media immediately. Stunts: Events like the self-shredding of a painting at auction have turned him into a global cultural phenomenon, not just an artist.
And so when an exhibition of works by the World's Most Famous Living Artist arrives in Warsaw, it is An Event. Below: the Banksy exhibition in Warsaw is certainly proving a draw. Saturday afternoon crowds. (Details at the bottom.)
So there we have it. David Hockney, Jeff Koons, Yayoi Kusama and Gerhard Richter lag far behind in terms of recognition. Banksy is much closer to the cultural zeitgeist, and closer to the ordinary person on the street of our planet's towns and cities. Yet his roots lie in the morally questionable practice of defacing someone else's property with spray paint.
I have a visceral aversion to graffiti of the mindless sort; it fouls the aesthetics of the places in which we spend our lives. We have, as a population, become inured to graffiti as a sort of low-level pollution, along with litter and smoke, though we can pick up the former, and wind clears the air. I believe that corporal punishment (a pair of black eyes delivered to the miscreant under medical supervision), or being drafted into a military clear-up brigade, or simply being forced to pay for the removal of the offending tags, is needed. Zero tolerance, especially for defacing historic stone or brick.
There is a world of difference between a Banksy and a simple tag squirted thoughtlessly on private (or indeed public) property. Some street art is to be admired or is there to make passers-by reflect. But real street art accounts for 0.01% of what is sprayed every day onto surfaces of our urban environments.
From out of that depressing, oftentimes threatening, visual sludge, formed by hundreds of millions of protozoan taggers, has evolved one apex artist called Banksy. Clearly this is art work. Immense amount of thought, planning and passion stand behind it. Banksy supports Causes – anti-war, anti-capitalism, animal welfare, urban blight, climate change, Ukraine, Palestine, the National Health Service. Banksy's aim is to shake up people's indifference to the suffering of others.
Each new Banksy work becomes an event. Below: the mural Royal Courts of Justice was created exactly two months ago (8 September 2025) and removed from said building the following day. An act of criminal damage (defacing a listed building) or a well-timed political statement? A London art-gallery owner said the piece could have been carefully taken down (presumably along with the fabric of the wall it was on) and sold at auction for £5 million, making its washing away also an act of criminal damage. Banksy tends to give the millions made at auction for his works to charity in any case.
Below: exit through the gift shop. Get your Banksy merch. T-shirts, mugs, prints etc. "Copyright is theft, man!"
The Mystery of Banksy – A Genius Mind is on from 10 October 2025 to 11 January 2026 at the Soho Art Center, ul. Minska 63. Nearly 150 exhibits including those from the Walled-Off Hotel installation in Palestine, the Dismal Land 'fun fair' in Weston-Super-Mare, and the six murals Banksy produced in Ukraine in November 2022. All the works are instantly recognisable; the exhibition confirmed in my own mind Banksy's status as the world's most famous living artist.
Though in 500 years will his works rank alongside those of Michelangelo, Vermeer, Monet and Van Gogh?
This time ten years ago:
Remembrance Sunday, Northolt
This time 15 years ago:
Death on the tracks




































