Artist Banksy calls on people to shoplift at Guess clothing store

U.K.-based street and performance artist Banksy is accusing clothing maker Guess of stealing his work and is calling on people to shoplift from the retailer’s store on Regent Street in London. 

“Attention all shoplifters,” Banksy wrote in a recent Instagram post. “Please go to Guess on Regent Street. They’ve helped themselves to my artwork without asking, how can it be wrong for you to do the same to their clothes?”

Banksy, whose identity is anonymous, claims the American clothing brand released a capsule collection of clothing featuring his designs, including his “Flower Thrower” motif, without his permission. According to a Guess press release, the items range in cost from about $47 to $319 each.

Guess chief creative officer Paul Marciano said the collection “is a way for fashion to show its gratitude” to the artist. 

The collection features iconic Banksy motifs on men’s, women’s and children’s pieces and is available for purchase online and in stores in the European Union. In a press release announcing the collection, Guess, said it was “inspired by Banksy’s Graffiti.” 

Guess partnered with Brandalised, a licensing company that secures the rights to famous graffiti designs and sells them to fans through partnerships with commercial brands, to release the collection. 

Neither company responded to CBS MoneyWatch’s request for comment. 

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Guess clothing released a collection featuring iconic motifs on men’s, women’s and children’s pieces by the anonymous street artist Banksy. The artist claims his designs are being used by the American clothing brand without his permission.

Guess


Right to stay anonymous 

In 2020, the artist’s application to trademark “Flower Thrower,” was rejected by the European Union’s Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO) because securing the copyright would have required him to reveal his undisclosed identity. 

But a 2001 ruling by the EUIPO declaring invalid Banky’s trademark on a spray-painted work of a chimpanzee wearing a sign titled, “Laugh Now But One Day We’ll Be In Charge,” was overturned this month by a European Board of appeals, industry news outlet ArtNews reported. 

The victory gives the artist the right to license his work while maintaining his anonymity.

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