Banksy prints, handwritten notes, a pair of trainers – and even a collection of “burner phones” – are among scores of items set to be auctioned from “the most definitive archive” of his early work.
Steve Lazarides, the anonymous street artist’s former agent and photographer, is auctioning artwork and other mementos amassed over more than 10 years of collaboration from the late 1990s.
He has held on to his collection since he and Banksyparted ways, but told Sky News it is now time “to move on”. The sale is estimated to make $2m (about £1.54m).
Julien’s, in California, will host the auction of more than 170 lots, including proof prints of famous works such as Love Is In The Air, Girl With Balloon, and several Rude Coppers, as well as a pair of special edition “owned and worn” Puma trainers (UK size 9, if that reveals anything) and 15 “burner phones used… to covertly contact Banksy when necessary”, including Nokia, Sony and Motorola models.
The term burner phone is slang for a typically cheap, pay-as-you-go mobile that can not easily be traced to the user.
Lazarides said “there could well be stuff” still on the mobiles, but did not give any more away.
“The burner phone was bought every couple of weeks to be used as walkie talkies and every single message was simply ‘call me’,” he said. “It became like a James Bond espionage fun game, and using the communication choice of drug dealers was a riot!”
Banksy would not have been able to get away with everything he did in those early days without him, Lazarides said. And “there were others who helped, also”.
The auction, titled Under Duress, includes hand-cut stencils featuring famous Banksy rats and chimpanzees. The item estimated to fetch the highest price is the Drill Rat stencil, with an additional hand-cutting of Banksy’s name attached, which is expected to sell for up to $200,000 (£154,000).
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Bidding has already started online, with a proof print of Girl With Balloon currently attracting the highest offer, of $60,000 (£46,250).
Lazarides, who previously worked as a gallerist in and around Soho, central London, said he had always been a collector “of those weird little bits and bobs that look quite fun”, and “half the time it was just shit that was left in my car, or when we moved studios and it never got taken out the van or the car”.
Julien’s co-founder Darren Julien has described it as an “astonishing collection” offering an “unprecedented look at the history and path of the man that would become the world’s most famous and visionary artist”. The auction, he added, is a “historic opportunity for the next caretaker to own the most comprehensive and definitive archive of Banksy’s legacy”.
While the work represents a huge part of Lazarides’ life, he said it felt cathartic to let go. He now wants to move on, go back to working as a photographer, and use the money to spend on his family.
“I’m the kind of person, if I’m letting go of one bit then it can all go. And it’s kind of, it’s done, that’s over, I can start moving on and doing something else and make some space in my cupboard… it’s been all pervasive for the last 25 years and it was time to move on.”
The item he has found most difficult to let go of is not a print, but a mission statement and logo for Pictures On Walls, the company he set up with Banksy “to let ordinary people love and afford art”. He says it was both his “and Banksy’s proudest moment”.
For years, Banksy’s identity has been the subject of much speculation. Most recently, the artist made headlines for a series of animal-themed artworks that sprang up across different areas of London over a nine-day period.
Lazarides said he liked the police box filled with fish, the seventh work in the series, which appeared in the City of London, but not much else.
“When he gets it right, he’s the best f****** artist in the world. That’s why I gave so much of my time to him, he’s brilliant.
“That series of London paintings, I don’t really understand where the politics have gone. And if there was a hidden meaning then he failed because you shouldn’t have to find another meaning as a viewer. Certainly not with graffiti, everyone should be able to understand it. Certainly with his.
“I don’t know, maybe he’s crippled by the fact there’s so many things to talk about, it’s easier to talk about nothing.”
What does Lazarides think the future holds for Banksy?
“I predict one day he will reveal himself and hopefully enjoy his life. I told him many times to do so.”
And if he did? “No one would believe it anyway!”
The Under Duress auction, the Banksy archive Of Steve Lazarides, starts at 10am local time (5pm in the UK) on 31 October
A British band were robbed at gunpoint on the first day of their US tour.
Frontman of the band Sports Team, Alex Rice, told Sky News that they had stopped in their tour bus at a Starbucks in Vallejo, California, on Tuesday – the morning after landing in San Francisco.
While he and his bandmates were ordering breakfast, they heard someone say “has anyone got a white sprinter van outside? It’s being robbed”.
“Natural reaction, you sprint towards it and try to stop it, and immediately [one of the robbers] pulls a gun,” he said.
“He pulls a gun, he sort of points it at our tour manager Lauren, there’s another guy loading stuff out and a third guy in getaway car.
“We all sprint back into the Starbucks. They’ve taken a huge amount of personal stuff and musical equipment from the middle of our van.
“So, haven’t played a note yet, one minute in, we’ve got our stuff taken.”
Rice added that the “really shocking bit… is we called the police straight away,” but found “their reaction to an ‘as it’s happening,’ ‘live gunpoint event’ was ‘okay if you could just file the report online’.”
He added: “People say ‘get down’ as if the rains just started coming down outside, as if the weather’s changed so people should go inside.
“That’s been the saddest bit to see, the level of resignation, the fact that people take this in their stride now.”
Laptops, in-ear monitors, cameras, and other personal items were taken in the robbery, but the band’s instruments were safe “because the back of the van is fortified”.
“The most immediate concern for us is passports, to be honest,” Rice told Sky News. “Three of us had our passports taken.
“It’s a ‘try to get to the consulate and get that sorted for Christmas’ sort of situation.”
The band are promoting their forthcoming third album, Boys These Days, and will continue their US tour despite the incident.
“We’re really lucky in that we’re able to do that,” Rice said. “We’ve got a lot of friends in San Francisco. People have been incredibly supportive.
“It’s a terrible thing to have happened but we’re lucky not to have had our actual instruments taken – which has happened to us in the past.”
Celebrity Masterchef contestant Melanie Sykes has criticised the TV industry in the wake of the allegations made about host Gregg Wallace, saying it is up to bosses to act on unprofessional behaviour and not let one person be a “scapegoat”.
The former TV presenter and broadcaster, who rose to fame on shows including The Big Breakfast and Today With Des And Mel in the 1990s and 2000s, appeared on Celebrity MasterChef in 2021.
She wrote about her experience on the show in her autobiography Illuminated, released in 2023, and how she decided to walk away from show business afterwards.
In a new clip shared on her YouTube channel, Sykes said she complained after appearing on the show, but did not want to make it formal.
Wallace, 60, faces allegations from 13 people across a range of shows over a 17-year period, with many others sharing their experiences in the wake of the initial claims.
He has temporarily stepped down from the BBC cooking show while historical misconduct complaints are externally reviewed by producers Banijay UK. His lawyers say “it is entirely false that he engages in behaviour of a sexually harassing nature”.
Sykes, 54, said she wanted to speak out to let people know what the industry is like. “Every time Gregg came over to the desk, I didn’t like him being around, really,” she said. “Because it’s all about vibrations and energy.”
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‘If it’s just banter then why am I crying in the toilet?’
‘Stop letting one person be a scapegoat’
Sykes, who also appeared on I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! in 2014, said the MasterChef production company was at fault “because they facilitate… what’s the word? It’s just unprofessionalism, really.
“I’ve seen unprofessionalism in many areas of that f****** industry and I’ve not exposed all and everything because I just don’t want to, it’s just so toxic, and I can’t…
“Stop letting one person be a scapegoat, which is the so-called talent, because that’s what they call you, is the one that has to carry the can all the time.
“If I had somebody misbehaving or acting unprofessionally on my production, let me tell you, they wouldn’t be on my production. I wouldn’t tolerate it. I don’t care who it is.”
Sykes said she believes alleged unprofessional behaviour is allowed to continue because “people think, well, you know, we can’t get rid of him really, because it’s such a successful show”.
She added: “I complained afterwards. I said I didn’t want to make a formal complaint because honestly, I’d spend my whole time in litigation if I did that. And I think that’s one of the reasons why people don’t go for it.”
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Stephen Fry on Wallace allegations
‘It’s not about wokeness’
Meanwhile, Stephen Fry has told Sky News’ Kay Burley that men in television must consider who may be the “victim or stereotype” at the root of their “light banter”.
“It’s just good manners, really,” he said. “Good manners have changed… and so I think we’ve all just got to realise it’s not about wokeness, it’s just about being sensitive to the atmosphere.”
Following a backlash – with even Downing Street weighing in – he issued an apology on Monday, saying: “I wasn’t in a good headspace when I posted it, I’ve been under a huge amount of stress, a lot of emotion, I felt very alone, under siege yesterday when I posted it.”
He added: “It’s obvious to me I need to take some time out now while this investigation is under way. I hope you understand and I do hope you will accept this apology.”
Fry said Wallace’s initial response was “unbelievably foolish”, and added: “Even if he felt that he’d been misunderstood himself, he could surely see that there were some women there who were truly hurt and had felt not listened to, and that he should first of all address that.”
Production company Banijay UK has appointed law firm Lewis Silkin to lead an investigation into Wallace’s alleged behaviour.
A spokesperson said the company takes the complaints “incredibly seriously” but will not comment on individual allegations while the external investigation is ongoing.
“It is important to note that MasterChef welfare processes are regularly adapted and strengthened and there are clear protocols to support both crew and contributors,” the Banijay spokesperson said. “These include multiple ways of reporting issues, including anonymously.”
In response to reports that multiple complaints had been raised with the BBC, a source for the corporation said it would not comment on individuals or any internal HR processes but that it would be “wrong to report the BBC has done nothing if or when matters have been raised with us – not least because it is already being widely reported there were interventions in both 2017 and 2018 where action was taken”.
Last week, a BBC spokesperson said that any issues raised are taken seriously and there are “robust processes in place” to deal with them.
“We are always clear that any behaviour which falls below the standards expected by the BBC will not be tolerated,” the spokesperson said.
Sky News has contacted representatives for Wallace for comment.
TV presenter Fearne Cotton has revealed she will undergo an operation to remove two benign tumours from her jaw.
The podcast host announced the news in an Instagram video on Tuesday, as she revealed she has been supported by fellow presenter Davina McCall, who had surgery on a rare brain tumour last month.
Cotton, 43, said: “I’ve got a benign tumour just in my jaw here, below my ear, another little tiny one above it.
“I’m very grateful they’re benign but they do need to come out because they’re on a nerve.
“So I’m gonna have that surgery, and then I’m gonna be resting to get better before Christmas.
“Not very good at resting, so wondering how that’s gonna go. But I’m feeling OK about it. I’m going into the operation feeling good and well.”
She also said her podcast, Happy Place, will “carry on as normal”.
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“I’ll be doing all the regular stuff, I’ve banked a load of good episodes so that will still be rolling out, and I’ll see you soon.”
In the video’s caption, she said she had “felt a lump under my ear on my jawline a while ago now but this year noticed it was growing”.
“Turns out it’s a benign tumour and another small one above it on the saliva gland,” she added.
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Davina McCall shares health update
“It’s obviously so weird that only a couple of months ago Davina told me about her tumour and then weeks later I was calling her having discovered mine.
“I’m not only lucky she’s a bloody good mate but also a beacon of light and positivity when it comes to this stuff.”
McCall, 57, left a comment on Cotton’s post that said: “Sending you so much healing and love. Can’t wait to give you a huge gentle cuddle.”
McCall, a former Big Brother host, said she was recovering from brain surgery last month which was to remove a “very rare” colloid cyst – a type of fluid-filled benign tumour in the brain.