Graffiti artist Banksy opens pop-up shop in London in trademark dispute

A man takes a photograph of a shopfront displaying a mini exhibition by secretive British artist, Banksy with the sign Gross Domestic Product in Croydon, south London on Oct 1, 2019. (Photo: AFP / Tolga Akmen)
Art fans and curious shoppers crowded around a disused shop in south London on Monday (Sep 30) after notorious street artist Banksy set up a mini art exhibition in protest at a greetings card company.
Scores of people vied for a view of some of the guerilla graffiti artist's works, including the stab vest he designed for grime artist Stormzy to wear during his headline performance at this year's Glastonbury Festival.

The exhibition popped up overnight on Surrey Street, in Croydon, with the exhibits shown behind large glass windows, under a shop sign reading "Gross Domestic Product".
Banksy said in a statement that his motivation was "possibly the least poetic reason to ever make some art".

Banksy said he had been prompted to open a shop as a way to get around copyright law after the greetings card company launched a legal bid to use his name to sell "fake" merchandise.
"I think they're banking on the idea I won't show up in court to defend myself," he added.

Other works on show include a baby's crib underneath a mobile made of security cameras and a reimagining of breakfast cereal character Tony the Tiger as a rug.
Framed images of his works adorn the shop walls, while a battered armchair decorated with cushions reading "life's too short" sits in front of a fireplace.
(Source: AFP)