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BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine
BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine
BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine
BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine
BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine
BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine
BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine
BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine
BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine
BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine
BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine
BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine
BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine

BANKSY 'Juxtapoz' (2015) Original Full-Issue Magazine

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Juxtapoz Magazine feat. Banksy, 2015
Original full-issue magazine focusing on the artist's now-legendary Dismaland Bemusement Park.
10.5 x 9 x 0.3 Inches
26.7 x 22.9 x 0.8 Centimeters
Complete full-issue magazine with Banksy's iconic 'Rat' on front cover.
Includes photos of the Dismaland exhibition with an exclusive interview with the illusive artist.
High-gloss, full-color; 129 pages.
*Note: Very Good - Excellent original condition.

ABOUT THE MAGAZINE

For the October, 2015 issue of Juxtapoz MagazineBanksy contributed not only the cover story and interview, but a statement about Dismaland and his first foray into theme park management. We get firsthand insight into how the project came about, how the artists were chosen, and why the destination is so pertinent...

Introduction by Banksy

Dismaland is the latest innovation in family light entertainment by the graffiti artist Banksy. Installed in the centre of an unfashionable British seaside town frequented by low-income families, Banksy describes it as “the perfect art audience.” The location is a former lido comprising four acres of walled seafront compound, which in recent years has come to more closely resemble a neglected prison yard, an atmosphere Banksy has endeavoured to preserve by declaring that none of the installation crew were allowed to bring a broom.

This is an art show for the 99% who would rather not be at an art show. It features a fairytale castle, a boat pond, arcade games and extensive water gardens, all given a distinctly modern twist. But beyond the Mickey-taking is a deadly serious attempt to assemble a show that takes stock of its generation. “It's scrappy, incoherent and self-obsessed, so maybe we're halfway there,” says Banksy.

This is certainly not a “street art” show—an art form Banksy describes as “just as reassuringly white, middle class and lacking in women as any other art movement.” The roster of artists ranges from Jenny Holzer, winner of the gold medal at the Venice Biennale, to Ed Hall, a pensioner who has spent forty years producing every major trade union banner from his garden shed.

Visitors are taken on an unflinching journey of art “made in the shadow of gathering clouds,” literally in the main gallery, as Dietrich Wegner's Playhouse towers above the centre of the room. Truly global in scope and scale, you will find art from Israel and Palestine hanging side by side.