Written by Tara John, CNN
US artist Ron English has vowed to whitewash an artwork by Banksy that he bought for $730,000, in protest of the market in street art.
The piece in question, titled "Slave Labour," depicts a young child on his knees by a sewing machine as he produces Union Jack bunting. It was painted on the outside wall of a bargain shop in north London in 2012 but was removed from the wall months later, before resurfacing at auction in Miami.
The lot was withdrawn after protests, but the artwork was eventually sold in London in 2013.
"Slave Labour" was sold again on Wednesday at
Julien's Auctions in Los Angeles. English, who bought the piece, told the UK's Press Association news agency that he planned to whitewash it "for my good pal Banksy."
Banksy's shredded artwork renamed
"This is a blow for street art. It shouldn't be bought and sold," English -- who
is a street artist himself and has gotten arrested many times for using public billboards, ad spaces and other highly visible spaces for his paintings and sculptures -- told Press Association.
"I'm going to paint over it and just include it in one of the walls in my house," English said. "We're tired of people stealing our stuff off the streets and reselling it so I'm just going to buy everything I can get my hands on and whitewash it."
He added that he plans to sell the whitewashed piece for "a million dollars ... I'm crazy but I'm not stupid."
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Banksy's newly-titled "Love is in the Bin" is unveiled on October 12, 2018, at Sotheby's in London. Originally titled "Girl with Balloon," the canvas passed through a hidden shredder seconds after the hammer fell on October 5 at Sotheby's London Contemporary Art Evening Sale, making it the first artwork in history to have been created live during an auction.
Scroll through to see more of the artist's work.
Credit: Tristan Fewings/Getty Images for Sotheby's
The sale comes after Banksy shredded his "Girl With Balloon" last month, just after it was bought for $1.4 million at Sotheby's. The prank was
widely interpreted as an example of street artists deploying guerrilla tactics to expose their disdain for the art world.
Nonetheless, the European buyer decided to go through with the purchase. According
to Sotheby's, she was happy to "end up with my own piece of art history."
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