Manhattan
Banksy taunts the law with the first piece in his residency, completed on October 1st at Allen and Canal Street in Manhattan. Photo courtesy carnagenyc on Flickr.
Manhattan (After)
The work was completely destroyed soon after when the building owner painted over the work. Others have tagged over it since.
Westside
Perhaps the most iconic of the set was completed on October 2nd at 25th Street between 10th and 11th avenues.
Westside (After)
The monotone piece later acquired an explosion of color from local graffiti artists.
Midtown (After)
There were some tags already on the wall before Banksy marked it, but more have been added since.
Bushwick
Painted October 4th at Stanwix and Melrose in Bushwick, Brooklyn. Banksy added "The Musical" to three different graffiti tags around the city as part of a series on this day.
Bushwick (After)
The piece has now been painted over, but the faded outline of his work is still visible, just barely.
All City
Banksy's first mobile piece of the residency created an idyllic paradise inside of an old box van. It has since disappeared.
Brooklyn
Completed on October 7th at King Street and Van Brunt Street in Red Hook, Brooklyn. The battered and bruised heart-shaped ballon is patched up enough to stay afloat.
Brooklyn (After)
It was later tagged over by local graffiti artists, before someone put a plastic barrier up to prevent further scrawls.
Greenpoint
On October 8th, Banksy painted a satirical quote, deliberately misattributed to Plato, on this door in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, between Provost Street and McGuinness Boulevard.
Greenpoint (After)
Soon after, the door was completely removed (presumably for sale) and replaced. Someone then offered their own satirical retort to Banksy's original work.
Lower East Side
This simply titled work was completed October 9th. It is located as its name suggests in Manhattan's Lower East Side on Ludlow Street, between Stanton and Rivington Streets, is one of Banksy's most elaborate yet, spreading from the wall onto a car nearby. The accompanying audio comes from "Collateral Murder," the military footage showing soldiers gunning down civilians in Iraq from a helicopter, first posted online in 2010 by Wikileaks. Looters have since taken the rear left door and the front left mirror. The front door is also unable to close, as The Verge's Sam Sheffer notes.
East New York
Banksy certainly likes furry animals. The artist's work comes off of the wall here, as a pile of debris near the base of the post suggests the beaver managed to chomp through the metal, felling the sign. It's located in East New York, Brooklyn, at Bradford Street and Pitkin Ave. Photo courtesy of carnagenyc on Flickr.
Meatpacking District
Titled "Sirens of the Lambs," the second mobile work drove the streets of Manhattan's Meatpacking District on October 11th. It has since disappeared.
Central Park
The next day Banksy let New Yorkers know that they had missed the opportunity to buy an original stenciled work for just $60. The stall set up in Central Park sold eight pieces in total.
Manhattan
Completed October 12th, this "Concrete Confessional" features a stencil of a priest peering through an actual concrete window cutout, located at East 7th Street and Cooper Square in Manhattan's East Village.
Queens
On October 14th this Banksy appeared in Woodside, Queens. The quote, "What we do in life echoes in eternity" comes from the 2000 Ridley Scott film Gladiator. Image courtesy Flickr user carnagenyc.
Tribeca
This tiny but immensely evocative memorial to the September 11th, 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center is arguably Banksy's most emotionally riveting work yet. The Verge's Sam Sheffer photographed this on October 15th, the day it was created. He's since heard the candles were knocked over and the flower taken.
All City McDonald's
Banky's first trip to the South Bronx on October 15th was an interactive sculpture of an elitist Ronald McDonald getting his shoes shined by a real performer. Bansky's website explained the sculpture would also be mobile, appearing at McDonald's restaurants around the entire city, and sure enough, shortly after this photo was taken it was removed by the shoe shiner and another man and placed into a black cargo van and to another McDonald's, but not before a local politician thanked the performers for visiting.
Bed Stuy
Banksy took his usual mix of high-and-low art to Brooklyn on October 17th, with this painting that turns a pre-existing archway into a bridge for his two finely-dressed silhouettes. Despite the title, it's located in Williamsburg, not Bedford-Stuyvesant.
West 24th Street
Banksy created an outdoor art gallery on October 18th, replete with champagne, a bench, and a security guard. It's located in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood, near many of the city's finest (and most expensive) art galleries. Both paintings are collaborations with Brazilian street artist Os Gemeos. Here, one of Banky's typical riot police figures stands among Gemeos' characters.
West 24th Street
The second of two works unveiled on October 18th under the Highline. It appears the space was rented out for the occasion. The second painting is the opposite of the first, and it is also a collaboration with Brazilian artist Os Gemeos.
Upper West Side
On October 20th Banksy paid Manhattan's Upper West Side a visit. He left behind a stencil that turns a Siamese (used by firefighters) into a carnival-style highstriker strength test at 79th street between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue.
South Bronx
Banksy's second trip to the South Bronx, this time on October 21st, resulted in a piece possibly commenting on the appreciation of graffiti art by the privileged classes. Unlike some of his earlier works, it appears the "ghetto for life" tag was sprayed by Banksy himself. The blue tag above the work was added at a later date.
Queens
Banksy's second sculpture caused a bit of a ruckus as it was placed on public property in Willets Point, near Citi Field. The replica Sphinx of Giza made of cinderblocks was removed by the man who first discovered it.
Hell's Kitchen
After taking a day off due to alleged "police activity," Banksy graced the far west side's Hustler strip club with a statement on the pursuit of love. A photo of the piece on Banksy's site was paired with the caption "waiting in vain..." and club owners plan to remove the door for safe keeping.