Banksy's Girl With A Balloon, for article on Banksy Girl with Balloon

Banksy’s “Girl with Balloon” appears on London streets

A stenciled image of a small girl reaching toward a red heart-shaped balloon appears on a wall in London’s Shoreditch neighborhood. No one commissions it. No museum sanctions it. Banksy simply leaves it there — and in doing so, creates one of the most recognized artworks of the 21st century C.E.

Key facts

  • Banksy Girl with Balloon: The mural series begins in 2002 C.E. with stenciled street art across London, including sites near Waterloo Bridge and in Shoreditch — none of the original London murals remain in place today.
  • Street art reach: The image spreads far beyond its original walls — deployed in 2005 C.E. on the West Bank barrier, repurposed in 2014 C.E. for the Syrian refugee crisis, and adapted again in 2017 C.E. during the U.K. general election.
  • Public resonance: A 2017 C.E. Samsung poll of 2,000 people in the U.K. named Girl with Balloon the country’s single favorite artwork — ahead of centuries of paintings, sculptures, and photographs.

What the image shows

The composition is almost brutally simple: a young girl in silhouette, arm outstretched, fingers open. A red heart-shaped balloon drifts just beyond her reach. Wind carries it away — or she has just let it go. The image doesn’t tell you which.

That ambiguity is part of its power. Is the girl losing something she loves? Releasing it by choice? Watching hope drift out of reach, or choosing to set it free? Banksy gives no caption. The image asks the question and steps aside.

The work fits within a tradition of public art that bypasses institutional gatekeeping — murals, wheat-paste posters, chalk drawings — but Banksy’s use of stencil technique allows a precision and repeatability that elevates the form. The same image can appear in Shoreditch and on the West Bank barrier and carry different weight in each location, shaped entirely by context.

Art as political speech

In August 2005 C.E., Banksy placed a variation called Balloon Debate on Israel’s West Bank barrier — the girl now floats above the wall, lifted by a cluster of balloons. The image transforms from personal loss into something more pointed: freedom, escape, the desire to rise above division.

In 2014 C.E., on the third anniversary of the Syrian civil war, he reworked the figure as a Syrian refugee girl. The updated image was projected onto the Eiffel Tower and onto Nelson’s Column in London on March 13, 2014 C.E. A companion animated video featured narration by Idris Elba and music by Elbow. The hashtag #WithSyria spread the image internationally across social media, demonstrating how a single stencil motif could be redeployed as a humanitarian communication tool — not just decoration.

In 2017 C.E., Banksy offered a free Union Jack–balloon variant print to U.K. voters in certain constituencies who could prove they had voted against the Conservative Party. The Electoral Commission warned this could violate bribery laws and potentially invalidate election results. Banksy withdrew the offer within days.

The auction and the shredder

On October 5, 2018 C.E., a 2006 C.E. framed copy of Girl with Balloon sold at Sotheby’s London for £1,042,000 — a record for Banksy at the time. Moments after the hammer fell, a mechanical paper shredder hidden inside the frame activated. The lower half of the canvas fed through the device in front of the assembled bidding room.

Banksy had built the shredder into the frame years earlier, anticipating the moment the piece might sell at auction. Sotheby’s called it “the first artwork in history to have been created live during an auction.” The buyer chose to complete the purchase. The partially shredded work was renamed Love Is in the Bin, authenticated by Banksy’s body Pest Control, and sold again at Sotheby’s in October 2021 C.E. for £18 million.

The shredding episode drew global attention not just as a stunt but as a commentary. An artwork mocking the commodification of art had just become more valuable because it was destroyed in the act of being sold. The irony was complete — and very expensive.

Lasting impact

The mural series demonstrates something that fine art institutions spent much of the 20th century C.E. arguing about: that publicly accessible art, made without permission and placed without charge, can achieve a cultural resonance that rivals or surpasses gallery work.

Girl with Balloon has appeared on museum walls, political campaigns, solidarity movements, and auction records. A single print in the Purple Artist Proof colorway sold in September 2020 C.E. for £791,250 — at the time the highest price ever paid for a Banksy print and the most expensive print sold in an online auction.

More broadly, the work helped shift how the art world and the general public think about where art belongs and who it is for. Street art’s legitimacy as a serious artistic medium — debated for decades — became considerably harder to dismiss after a stencil from Shoreditch was voted the U.K.’s favorite artwork over centuries of canonical painting.

The image also shows how a visual symbol can be repurposed without losing coherence. From refugee crisis to election campaigns to auction floor performance art, the girl and the balloon retained their emotional legibility across every new context.

Blindspots and limits

Banksy’s anonymity, while integral to the work’s ethos, makes attribution and provenance complicated in ways that have affected owners, galleries, and buyers. A print worth an estimated £270,000 was stolen from a London gallery as recently as September 2024 C.E. — a reminder that street art’s counter-cultural origins do not protect its high-value reproductions from the same risks as conventional art.

The original street murals no longer exist. The art was always ephemeral; what has survived is its reproduction and documentation, raising genuine questions about whether what the market now trades is the same thing that appeared on those walls in 2002 C.E. — or something else entirely.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Girl with Balloon

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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