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10 Facts About Banksy's Choose Your Weapon

EA
reviewed by Erin Argun,
Last updated5 Jun 2023
Choose Your Weapon (lemon) by Banksy - MyArtBrokerChoose Your Weapon (lemon) © Banksy 2010
Joe Syer

Joe Syer, Co-Founder & Specialistjoe@myartbroker.com

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Weaving together complex themes of social injustice, violence, peace and progression, Choose Your Weapon is one of the most important Banksy Prints.

To learn more about it's history and influence, see our 10 facts here:

1.

When did Banksy's Choose Your Weapon first appear?

Choose Your Weapon (Light Orange) by Banksy - MyArtBrokerChoose Your Weapon (Light Orange) © Banksy 2010

Banksy’s Choose Your Weapon, also called CYW, first appeared on a wall outside The Grange pub in Bermondsey, London, in 2010. The mural combined Banksy’s earlier graphic black and white stencil style with a more hyperrealist, three-dimensional figure.

To Discover London’s Top 12 Banksy Murals, see our article.

2.

Banksy's dog pays homage to Keith Haring

Barking Dog by Keith Haring - MyArtBrokerBarking Dog © Keith Haring 1990

The dog featured in Choose Your Weapon is a motif that appeared in the work of Keith Haring, a pioneer of graffiti art in New York in the 1980s. Haring was known for his social commentary and activism, and is an important influence on Banksy’s work. Including Haring’s Barking Dog emphasises Banksy’s call for peace and the value of art in achieving this.

3.

What is Banksy's inspiration for Choose Your Weapon?

Choose Your Weapon (Bright Pink) by Banksy - MyArtBrokerChoose Your Weapon (Bright Pink) © Banksy 2010

Choose Your Weapon addresses the trend of disaffected youth owning aggressive dogs as weapons – an issue that was receiving a lot of media attention at the time this work was made. Here, Banksy compiles a complex and contradictory message, putting a spin on the idea of dogs as man’s best friend, by making him man’s enemy.

But, even though Haring’s Barking Dog has been weaponised, its cartoon nature and its connotations to social justice make it seem harmless. Banksy aims to turn the prejudice and violence of gang culture back into the progressive nature of art, reminding us of the security of man’s best friend.

4.

When was Choose Your Weapon released as a print?

Choose Your Weapon (Queue Jumping Grey) by Banksy - MyArtBrokerChoose Your Weapon (Queue Jumping Grey) © Banksy 2010

Choose Your Weapon was first released as editioned prints in December 2010 by Banksy’s then printer, Pictures on Walls. On the morning of the release, thugs and aggressively keen Banksy fans caused fights and disorder, pushing fans who had been queuing in the cold out of the way.

The event was notorious and meant that many people missed out on their chance to buy a coveted Banksy print. To console those who unfairly left empty-handed, Banksy released an additional, limited-edition 58 prints with a grey background. These prints were called the Queue Jumping Grey edition.

5.

The masked man is a popular Banksy motif

Love Is In The Air (flower thrower) by Banksy - MyArtBrokerLove Is In The Air (flower thrower) © Banksy 2003

The central figure of Choose Your Weapon is a young man with his hood raised and a mask covering his face to protect his identity. This anonymous figure also appears in Banksy’s iconic Love Is In The Air (Flower Thrower), who has appeared repeatedly throughout his career. The masked figure is widely believed to represent the disaffected youth, marginalised by society, and who, in Banksy’s work, fight back using peaceful means (in the case of these two artworks, barking cartoon dogs and flower grenades).

6.

No one knows if the Choose Your Weapon mural still exists

Choose Your Weapon by Banksy - MyArtBrokerImage © Sergey Kozak via Flickr, CC BY 2.0 / Choose Your Weapon © Banksy 2010

Shortly after its first appearance, the mural was boarded over. Banksy returned and repainted the image soon after and protected it with the addition of a perspex cover, a treatment undergone by many of Banksy's murals.Since then, posters and flyers have entirely obscured Choose Your Weapon from view, leaving people unsure whether the mural is still underneath.

7.

A false tip-off led buyers to queue at Marks & Spencer a day early

Choose Your Weapon (Olive) by Banksy - MyArtBrokerChoose Your Weapon (Olive) © Banksy 2010

As excitement over Banksy’s imminent new release for Choose Your Weapon built up, rumours began to spread. One rumour caused many collectors to queue outside Marks & Spencer in Soho from 10pm the night before the scheduled release. In response, Pictures on Walls decided to release three of the colour variations there the next morning: lemon, olive, and magenta.

8.

How many colour variations of Choose Your Weapon are there?

Choose Your Weapon (green) by Banksy - MyArtBrokerChoose Your Weapon (green) © Banksy 2010

Banksy’s Choose Your Weapon is available in 19 colourways, a much larger number of variations compared to other Banksy prints. With edition sizes varying between 20 and 100, colours include: bright pink, dark blue, bright purple, dark orange, gold, green, khaki, lemon, light orange, magenta, olive, red, silver, sky blue, slate, soft yellow, turquoise, white, and grey (Queue Jump Edition).

9.

Choose Your Weapon was the last new editioned Banksy print

Choose Your Weapon (Hand Finished, White) by Banksy - MyArtBrokerChoose Your Weapon (Hand Finished, White) © Banksy 2005

With his rising reputation as a formidable and collectable street artist, Banksy has almost completely stopped releasing prints to the public since 2010. This was in part due to the unmanageable clamour for his works on release days, but also due to the number of fraudulent prints in existence.

Choose Your Weapon is the last new Banksy print series to be publicly released, although the artist more recently created a reworked Sale Ends in 2017 and his merchandise shop Gross Domestic Product in 2019.

10.

Where does the phrase 'choose your weapon' come from?

Choose Your Weapon (Dark Blue) by Banksy - MyArtBrokerChoose Your Weapon (Dark Blue) © Banksy 2010

Banksy's iconic phrase, 'Choose your weapon', which is sometimes abbreviated to 'CYW', is a spin on a famous saying from English author Edward Bulwer-Lytton: 'The pen is mightier than the sword'. It is an encouragement to resolve conflict through peaceful means, like writing, rather than to resort to violence.

Ultimately, in Choose Your Weapon, Banksy's own craft— the can of spray paint—is mightier than the sword. By referencing the work of another artist well-known for his protest art, Keith Haring, Banksy advocates the power of art to make real political change. Not only is the central figure choosing a harmless weapon, but Banksy is too: art. Throughout his career, Banksy has tackled pressing and sensitive subjects. His cans of spray paint and his stencils have been weapons against social injustice and often a gift to those in need.

Joe Syer

Joe Syer, Co-Founder & Specialistjoe@myartbroker.com

Interested in buying or selling
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Banksy

Banksy

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