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Has Banksy finally let his mask slip? Fans claim man spotted at London mural bears 'striking resemblance' to ex-public schoolboy believed to be secretive street artist

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He's the elusive street artist whose mysterious murals attract crowds of onlookers and tempt celebrity buyers - but Banksy has never confirmed his true identity.

Yet locals admiring his latest work in London believe the prime suspect might have let his mask slip by turning up at the scene and being captured on camera.

A man said to bear a striking resemblance to Robin Gunningham was spotted beside the recently-revealed tree-themed painting in Finsbury Park, north London, on Saturday morning.

The name was first revealed by a Mail On Sunday investigation in 2008 which reported that he is a former public schoolboy from Bristol.

The newspaper also published a photograph taken in Jamaica in 2004 showing a man with a bag of spray cans by his feet - which was identified as Mr Gunningham. 

The latest photos and video were taken beside a mural which appeared on a wall in Hornsey Road on March 17 before being vandalised with streaks of white paint shortly afterwards.

A man said to resemble ex-public schoolboy Robin Gunningham was photographed at the scene of the latest Banksy mural in Finsbury Park, north London, on Saturday morning

A man said to resemble ex-public schoolboy Robin Gunningham was photographed at the scene of the latest Banksy mural in Finsbury Park, north London, on Saturday morning

A Mail On Sunday investigation previously identified the man behind Banksy as being ex-public schoolboy Robin Gunningham, from Bristol - pictured here in Jamaica in 2004

A Mail On Sunday investigation previously identified the man behind Banksy as being ex-public schoolboy Robin Gunningham, from Bristol - pictured here in Jamaica in 2004

The newest Banksy mural appeared on a wall in Hornsey Road on March 17

The newest Banksy mural appeared on a wall in Hornsey Road on March 17

A local Banksy fan who took the pictures said: 'I have been going to the mural for a whole week.

'On Saturday there was more security fences and CCTV up and a few people putting up Perspex over the artwork.

'I went back at 10am to go have another look at what they were doing and saw this man who looks exactly like the photo I saw 20 years ago of Banksy.

'I found it weird he was putting up his own Perspex.

'The people putting it up weren't wearing council uniforms or anything. One was wearing a Nirvana T-shirt - he must have been there for hours.' 

The new mural depicts an abstract appearance of foliage next to a stencil of a person holding a pressure hose.

It was later confirmed by Banksy on his Instagram to be genuine.

The pictures of the man who could be Banksy were taken on Saturday morning

The pictures of the man who could be Banksy were taken on Saturday morning

One local said he 'saw this man who looks exactly like the photo I saw 20 years ago of Banksy'

One local said he 'saw this man who looks exactly like the photo I saw 20 years ago of Banksy'

The mural shows an abstract appearance of foliage next to a stencil of a person holding a pressure hose

The mural shows an abstract appearance of foliage next to a stencil of a person holding a pressure hose

Banksy is also believed to have gone by the name Robin Banks, and in 2017 the DJ Goldie referred to him in an interview on the Distraction Pieces podcast as 'Rob'.

One of Banksy's most striking moments was in 2003 when he disguised himself as a pensioner and installed a piece in a vacant spot in the Tate Britain in London.

His artwork Girl With Balloon self-destructed in a Sotheby's London saleroom when descending into a shredder in 2018.

That piece was then renamed Love Is In The Bin, which in 2021 sold for £18.6million - an all-time high for a Banksy artwork.

It was reported last October that Banksy was named as the first defendant in a High Court legal action accusing him of defamation.

His co-defendant is the company Banksy established named Pest Control Ltd, which sells his art.

MailOnline also revealed how a former Labour Parliamentary lobbyist Joy Millward, originally from the West Midlands, is said to be married to Banksy.  

She worked as a researcher for Labour MP Austin Mitchell, who died in 2021, and later set up Principle Affairs, a lobby group for charities. 

Pictures were taken of a man some have suggested looks like Robin Gunningham

Pictures were taken of a man some have suggested looks like Robin Gunningham

Banksy fans have been taking photographs of his newest artwork

Banksy fans have been taking photographs of his newest artwork

Streaks of white paint defaced the artwork which appeared on March 17

Streaks of white paint defaced the artwork which appeared on March 17

Protective fences have been installed near the new mural in Finsbury Park, north London

Protective fences have been installed near the new mural in Finsbury Park, north London

Crowds are continuing to flock to the scene of Banksy latest's mural, in Hornsey Road

Crowds are continuing to flock to the scene of Banksy latest's mural, in Hornsey Road

Artwork in north London, attributed to guerrilla graffiti artist Banksy, is pictured on Essex Road in Islington on March 4, 2008

Artwork in north London, attributed to guerrilla graffiti artist Banksy, is pictured on Essex Road in Islington on March 4, 2008

Love is in the Air (Flower Thrower) by Banksy

Love is in the Air (Flower Thrower) by Banksy

Ms Millward is thought to have met Mr Gunningham in 2003 before they married in Las Vegas in 2006.

The Mail On Sunday investigation identified Banksy as Mr Gunningham, Bristol-born son of former contracts manager Peter Gunningham and his wife, company director's secretary Pamela.

Meanwhile, Banksy's voice was recently heard for the first time in 20 years when an audio clip was unearthed of him refusing to apologise for his graffiti.

The recording dates back to 2003 when ex-BBC arts correspondent Nigel Wrench interviewed Banksy to mark the opening of his Turf War exhibition in east London.

Only some of the material was broadcast that July on the Radio 4's PM programme, but Mr Wrench was recently listening to The Banksy Story podcast which came out last July - leading him to find the full interview on a minidisc at his home.

The BBC released last November a bonus podcast episode featuring the discussion.

In the interview Banksy can be heard defending how he does his work undercover at speed, saying: 'I'm not here to apologise for it - it's a quicker way of making your point, right?'

According to the podcast, the interview was recorded in the run-up to the artist's 30th birthday, as he was installing his debut exhibition, Turf War, in a warehouse in Hackney, East London.

The show featured a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II as a chimpanzee, one of Winston Churchill with a grass Mohican and two live pigs painted in the blue and white check worn by the Metropolitan Police.

A Mail On Sunday investigation in 2008 identified Mr Gunningham as Banksy

A Mail On Sunday investigation in 2008 identified Mr Gunningham as Banksy 

Robin Gunningham and Robert del Naja from Bristol trip-hop band Massive Attack

Robin Gunningham and Robert del Naja from Bristol trip-hop band Massive Attack 

Banksy's work called Love Is In The Bin self-destructed at Sotheby's, London, in 2018

Banksy's work called Love Is In The Bin self-destructed at Sotheby's, London, in 2018

This artwork featured in an exhibition called The World Of Banksy at Porta Nuova railway station in the Italian city of Turin in 2022

This artwork featured in an exhibition called The World Of Banksy at Porta Nuova railway station in the Italian city of Turin in 2022 

An artist believed to be Banksy was seen putting up a creation at the Tate Britain in 2003

An artist believed to be Banksy was seen putting up a creation at the Tate Britain in 2003

In the interview, Banksy said his work was a 'celebration of vandalism', adding: 'It's about justice.

'If you've ever fallen foul of the justice system, then it turns you very sceptical about everything, so I guess I like to turn it on its head a little bit. I'm into working out who really are the good guys.'

He has sold works to singer Christina Aguilera, who owns a pornographic picture of Queen Victoria with a prostitute.

Another buyer was actress Angelina Jolie who has a twist on a Manet painting in which a white family lunch under an umbrella watched by 15 starving Africans.

He also created the artwork for Blur's 2003 album Think Tank.

Crowds of people have continued to visit the site of the new mural in Hornsey Road. 

Estate agent Alex Georgiou, owner of the building where it appeared, previously looked to allay neighbours' fears by claiming he wouldn't be charging more off the back of the area's sudden fame.

However, he welcomed interest from potential buyers, as he told MailOnline: 'You know what, if somebody offered me millions and they can have the building and take the flats with it. Feel free.'

Turf War by Banksy

Turf War by Banksy

A section of a work Banksy created during lockdown in his bathroom. The artist captioned the social media post: 'My wife hates it when I work from home'

A section of a work Banksy created during lockdown in his bathroom. The artist captioned the social media post: 'My wife hates it when I work from home'

Flying Copper by Banksy, on display at The Art of Banksy exhibition on May 17 last year

Flying Copper by Banksy, on display at The Art of Banksy exhibition on May 17 last year

The owner of one building in Shoreditch, east London, painted over one of Banksy's etchings after they became irritated by a security light constantly being activated by Banksy fans turning up to view it.

And homeowners Garry and Gokean Coutts spent £200,000 removing a mural of a seagull from their house in Lowestoft, Suffolk, when they were forced to hire security after it became a target for vandals and thieves.

Another Banksy artwork that appeared in Peckham, south London - a traffic stop sign covered with three military drones - was stolen less than an hour later last December.

MailOnline has approached Banksy's representatives Pest Control Office for comment. 

Who is Banksy? A former public schoolboy from middle-class suburbia, Massive Attack's Robert Del Naja or Gorillaz founder Jamie Hewlett, the theories behind the identity of the world's most elusive street artist 

The identity of Banksy is one of the most closely guarded secrets in the world, but that hasn't stopped people from speculating.

The street artist, whose career began in the 90s, is known by millions of people thanks to the appearance of dozens of iconic artworks in unexpected locations around the world, with many having gone on to sell for millions.

For years his identity has been a hot topic, with names such as Massive Attack's Robert Del Naja and Gorillaz founder Jamie Hewlett being floated around.

Regardless of who he his, Banksy's works are hot property on the art market.

In 2021, his 'Love is in the Bin' work was bought for more than £18million, with its value having been boosted after a shredder hidden in its frame cut it to pieces moments after it was sold for the first time in 2018.

The work, previously known as 'Girl with Balloon', was just one of more than a dozen of Banksy's creations that have sold for more than £2million.

Robin Gunningham

Banksy uses art as a form of activism, regularly making societal and political statements with their works.

The artist was born just outside of Bristol in 1973 and he was a talented illustrator who drew cartoons.

Having also sprayed his tag across Bristol, Banksy then evolved with the times and began creating more sophisticated pieces, whilst always keeping his identity hidden.

One of Banksy's earliest works is the The Mild Mild West. 

The large mural was painted in 1999 in Bristol's Stokes Croft and shows a teddy bear throwing a Molotov cocktail at three riot police.

It was painted by the artist over three days in broad daylight and is still in the city today, among some of Banksy's other works.

An exhaustive Mail On Sunday investigation into Banksy's identity in 2008 heard from dozens of friends, former colleagues, enemies, flatmates and even family members.

The search began with an image of a man in Jamaica at work with his stencils and cans of spray paint.

Although Banksy denied the image showed him, the Mail's investigation was later backed by researchers at Queen Mary University.

They used 'geographic profiling' - a technique more often used to catch criminals or track outbreaks of disease - to plot the locations of 192 of Banksy's presumed artworks.

The sites indicated 'hot spots' which were narrowed down to pinpoint an individual. Peaks within these clusters were found to correlate to a pub, playing fields and residential addresses closely linked to Robin Gunningham and his friends and family.

Mr Gunningham attended Bristol Cathedral School and was born in July 1973. A school photo of him bore a striking resemblance to the man in the Jamaica photograph.

A former school friend described him as being 'extremely talented' at art and admitted he would 'not be at all surprised' if he was Banksy.

In anonymous interviews he has done, Banksy has said he first became interested in graffiti at school.

And a fellow artist he was living with in Bristol in 1998, Luke Egan, went on to exhibit with Banksy at Santa's Ghetto, an art store in London's West End.

However, Mr Gunningham's family denied that he was Banksy and the link was never explicitly confirmed.

Robert Del Naja

Another popular theory is that Banksy is Massive Attack's Robert Del Naja.

As well as being a founder member of his hit band, who have sold more than 13million studio albums worldwide, Del Naja, 58, is also a graffiti artist who has done work in Bristol under the name of 3D.

Banksy has named 3D as one of his early inspirations.

The assumption that Del Naja could be Banksy was first discussed after DJ Goldie reportedly said his name on a podcast while talking about him.

He said: 'No disrespect to Rob, I think he is a brilliant artist. I think he has flipped the world of art over.'

Fans have also claimed to have spotted Banksy artworks in the same cities as where Massive Attack played-twice. But Del Naja has denied the claims publicly.

Jamie Hewlett

It has also been suggested that Jamie Hewlett, who founded the Gorillaz, could be Banksy.

This was because an anonymous forensic expert allegedly linked him to every company associated with the street artist.

Banksy has also designed work used in the Gorillaz music videos in the past. But any link has been denied by his publicist.

Many people also claim to have actually spotted Banksy over the years.

One more recent sighting was apparently of the street artist wearing PPE while on the London Underground in 2020.

And in 2018, it was claimed that a passerby had seen him near one of his works in Hull.

Meanwhile, in April 2017, a woman saw an artist in an Israeli mall who was working. The artist had recently opened an exhibition in Bethlehem.

She filmed the man, who seemed concerned and covered his face when he realised he was on camera.

Fleeing artist in Melbourne

In October 2016, an artist furious he was being filmed was captured on camera on in Melbourne, sparking rumours that he was Banksy.

In the mobile phone footage, the person filming was seen approaching a man down a dark alleyway as he sprayed paint on wall.

After he began walking away, she raced after the man, who turned and tried to block the camera with his hand, shouting 'f*** off, f*** off', before escaping down an alley.

Man in Brooklyn warehouse

In 2013, many believed Banksy's identity had finally been revealed and Twitter blew up after user @DjJonHenry posted photographs of a group of men and two trucks used for Banksy’s recent Sirens Of The Lambs and Waterfall mobile works of art.

The photo showed five men arranging stuffed animals in a truck outside a warehouse in Red Hook Brooklyn, leading to speculation that one of the men was the reclusive artist.

Henry said the photographs were taken at a warehouse in the Red Hook area of Brooklyn and that he approached the men after recognizing the vehicles from Banksy's month-long residency in New York.

The men refused to answer when Henry asked where Banksy was, although he tweeted that he thought the man on top of the truck might be him since he was directing the others and spoke with an English accent.

Other media sources, including Gothamist, speculated that the man to the left of the vehicle could be Banksy because he boew a resemblance to the man in the photo published by the MoS in their 2008 investigation that named Mr Gunningham as Banksy.

Henry backtracked the claims after receiving a mass of replies from Banksy-fans who accused him of trying to jeopardize the remainder of Banksy's show.

Thierry Guetta

The Street artist's 2010 documentary Exit Through the Gift Shop shares the story of Theiry Guetta, a street artist in Los Angeles who goes by the name Mr Brainwash.

The French filmmaker runs a vintage clothing shop and obsesses over filming his surroundings, he became famous after the documentary and rumours spread that he was Banksy.

The theory has been flattened by various sources.

An unnamed woman

Most theories assume Banksy is a man, but some rumours emerged that the artist is actually a woman in charge of a group of artists.

Chris Healey first put forward the theory in the documentary Banksy Does New York, and says that Banks is the blonde woman who appears in the studio scenes in Exit Through the Gift Shop.

While Healey refuses to give up his source, he maintains his stance.

Richard Pfeiffer

The Brooklyn freelance engineer and artist was admiring one of Banky's works in Manhattan with his girlfriend when he was arrested and accused of drawing the image.

At the time, he had a pen in his pocket but was able to prove it was not the same one that drew the graffiti and the charges were dropped six months later.

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