The elusive artist Banksy has confirmed he painted swimming fish on to a City of London Police sentry box, which was first spotted on Sunday morning.
The glass-fronted box on Ludgate Hill – near The Old Bailey and St Paul’s Cathedral – has been transformed to look like an aquarium.
This is his seventh new artwork to be revealed in the capital in as many days.
Since Monday, stencilled silhouette images of a goat, elephants, monkeys, a wolf, pelicans and a cat have popped up in various locations across London.
This work differs from the previous works by Banksy unveiled this week in that it is a detailed painting that appears to have been created with translucent spray paint.
Two City of London Police officers have visited the sentry box and taken pictures.
One officer said the art was picked up on CCTV cameras and they were asked to come and have a look.
He added that they were waiting to hear what will be done about it.
In a statement, Det Ch Insp Andy Spooner said: “We are aware of criminal damage to a City of London Police box in Ludgate Hill.
“We are liaising with the City of London Corporation who own the police box.”
A local resident came to take pictures of the fish artwork as she heard it could be by Banksy said: “I walked up here yesterday and I don’t remember seeing it, I think I would have noticed it.
“I like it, it’s got a charm to it somehow. It’s not in your face, it’s quite subtle.
“I know some of the others have been stolen, so I wanted to come and see it.
“It’s actually rather beautiful in the sun.”
‘Big Banksy fans’
Three people travelled from the West Midlands to London for the weekend to see the latest Banksy artwork around the city.
Before it was confirmed as Banksy’s a man, who had travelled from the Black Country said he was not sure if the fish art was by Banksy and he had seen reports of a seal elsewhere which they were going to go and see.
He said: “We’ve come down this weekend, we’re big Banksy fans.”
Another man in the group said if the fish artwork was Banksy’s, it was probably his favourite of the ones revealed this week.
Along with CCTV and road-narrowing bollards, police sentry boxes like these were installed around the Square Mile in the 1990s to protect the City from terror attacks during the IRA troubles. Police officers stood guard in them to monitor traffic.
On Saturday, the artist’s sixth piece – a stretching cat on an empty, distressed advertising billboard – was removed from its location in north-west London hours after it was revealed.
Crowds booed as the piece in Cricklewood was dismantled by three men who said they were hired by a “contracting company” to take down the billboard for safety reasons.
Hours after Banksy confirmed the design was his, crowds gathered from across London to see the piece before the men, who claimed to be contractors, arrived.
A black board was first used to cover up the cat artwork on the billboard at the request of the police, who wanted to stop people walking in the road in front of traffic.
The cat design was the second piece to be removed during the week after a painting of a howling wolf on a satellite dish was taken off the roof of a shop in Peckham, south London, less than an hour after it was unveiled.
The artist has been making announcements on his Instagram page claiming the works each day since Monday.
Additional reporting by PA Media.
Source Agencies