Blink-182 Member Is Selling a Treasured Banksy

'Crude Oil (Vettriano)' could fetch $6M at Sotheby's next month
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Feb 18, 2025 1:59 PM CST
Blink-182's Bassist Is Selling a Treasured Banksy
Mark Hoppus of Blink-182 poses by his painting "Crude Oil (Vettriano)" by Banksy (2005), which is being sold by Sotheby's on March 4 with some of the proceeds going to victims of the Los Angeles wildfires.   (Max Montgomery/Sotheby's via AP)

A painting by street artist Banksy with an environmental message and an estimate of up to $6.3 million is going up for auction, with some of the proceeds helping victims of the Los Angeles wildfires. Sotheby's auction house said Tuesday that "Crude Oil (Vettriano)" is being sold in London next month from the collection of Mark Hoppus, bassist with California skate-punk band Blink-182, reports the AP. Hoppus said he was drawn to the subversion, humor, and intelligence of Banksy's work and the similarities between "skateboarding, punk rock, and art." "I feel like street art and punk rock have the same core," Hoppus said. "The left-out and overlooked making their own reality. … Just go make art. It's the same spirit. And I've loved art and especially street art ever since realizing that."

"Crude Oil (Vettriano)" is part of a 2005 series of works in which Banksy put a satirical spin on famous paintings—withering Vincent van Gogh's "Sunflowers" and smashing the diner window in Edward Hopper's "Nighthawks." The artist said his aim was to show that "the real damage done to our environment is not done by graffiti writers and drunken teenagers, but by big business." The work going under the hammer is based on "The Singing Butler," a painting by Scottish artist Jack Vettriano showing a couple in evening dress dancing on a beach as servants proffer sheltering umbrellas. Banksy has added a sinking oil liner and two figures lugging a barrel of toxic waste.

"We loved this painting since the moment we saw it," said Hoppus, who bought the artwork with his wife, Skye Everly, in 2011. He said the painting—"unmistakably Banksy, but different"—has hung in the family's homes in London and Los Angeles. Hoppus said he would use the proceeds of the sale to buy work by upcoming artists. Some will go to the California Fire Foundation, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, and Cedars Sinai Hematology Oncology Research. (More Banksy stories.)

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