THREE of Banksy’s most recognisable artworks from Robbie Williams’ collection are set to make their auction debut.
The pieces include Kissing Coppers, which was first unveiled on the exterior of The Prince Albert Pub in Brighton in 2004.
The artwork, along with Girl With Balloon and Vandalised Oils (Choppers), will be up for sale in the first edition of Sotheby’s The Now Evening Auction in London on March 2.
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The pieces by anonymous street artist Banksy are estimated to be worth millions of pounds each.
Kissing Coppers depicts two British policemen in a passionate embrace.
The original mural was removed in 2014 after being repeatedly vandalised.
Williams’s version of the artwork from 2005, which is estimated at £2.5 million to £3.5 million, is the first time a Kissing Coppers painting on canvas has been offered on the secondary market, Sotheby’s said.
Girl With Balloon first made its debut under Waterloo Bridge in 2002 and it made headlines in 2018 after it partially self-destructed at the conclusion of a Sotheby’s auction in which it had been sold for £1.1 million.
The new partially shredded artwork became Love Is In The Bin and went under the hammer for £18,582,000 in October 2021, which the auction house cited as a record fee for the street artist.
Williams’s Girl With Balloon (2006) is depicted on metal and is the first of its kind to appear at auction, Sotheby’s have said, starting with a price estimate of £2 million to £3 million.
The third Banksy piece in the collection is Vandalised Oils (Choppers) from 2005, and features two armed military helicopters disrupting a serene pastoral landscape.
The artwork, which hails from the artist’s Vandalised Oils series which sees graffiti on top of classical oil paintings, has an estimated price tag of £2.5 million to £3.5 million.
Speaking of the artworks, singer Robbie Williams said: “I remember seeing Girl With Balloon, Vandalised Oils (Choppers) and Kissing Coppers for the first time.
“I believe they are some of his best paintings and I love how closely linked they are to the street pieces.
“As a collector of Banksy’s work, you become part of a broader cultural movement.”
Hugo Cobb, head of The Now Evening Auction at Sotheby’s London, said: “These works unite the cultural legacies of two of Britain’s biggest stars: Robbie Williams and Banksy.
“Like their creator, and like their owner, they are acerbic, iconic, irreverent, and unique.”
The Now Evening Auction aims to platform artworks executed in the last 20 years by the most cutting-edge artists of today and tomorrow, Sotheby’s said.
The three paintings will first go on exhibition in Sotheby’s New York galleries from January 22 for a six-day preview.
They will then embark on a global tour to Hong Kong from February 8 to 9 and then London for its final public view from February 22 until March 2.
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