Banksy Returns to New York With a Powerful Tribute to Jailed Turkish Artist Zehra Doğan
He’s back. Banksy has returned to New York for the first time since his much-hyped 2013 residency, and he’s taking over one of the city’s most famous sites for street art, the Houston Bowery Wall. The anonymous British street artist’s newest work is a protest over the imprisonment of Zehra Doğan, a Turkish artist and journalist who is currently serving a nearly three-year jail sentence for one of her paintings.
The mural is on a blank white wall and features a series of tally marks for each day of Doğan’s incarceration, which began last March. The piece, done in collaboration with the street artist Borf, also includes a portrait of Doğan, shown trapped behind bars, one of which is actually a pencil. She was arrested after posting a watercolor showing the rubble of the Kurdish town of Nusaybin, destroyed by the Turkish army in 2015, on her social media.
Banksy shared an image of the mural on his Instagram with the hashtag #FREEzehradogan, writing “one year ago, Zehra Dogan was jailed for painting this watercolor of a photograph she saw in the newspaper. Protest against this injustice by re-gramming her painting, and tagging Turkey’s President Erdogan.”
Each night, above the 70-foot-long mural, Banksy will project an image of Doğan’s original piece, which shows the Turkish flag flying above the destroyed buildings. “I really feel for her. I’ve painted things much more worthy of a custodial sentence,” Banksy told the New York Times.