11 Banksy Murals That Expose What Britain Tries to Hide
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From maids sweeping secrets into walls to kids sewing Union Jacks, Banksy has never shied away from challenging Britain’s self-image. In this collection, his sharpest works confront class, empire, inequality, and state control—one mural at a time. Featured locations include London, Dover, Clacton-on-Sea, and more.
More Banksy!: 24 artworks by Banksy: Who Is The Visionary of Street Art?

1. Sweep It Under
A maid in Victorian uniform lifts the wall like a curtain and sweeps dirt behind it. The illusion suggests society hides its problems rather than solves them—poverty, exploitation, and injustice brushed neatly out of view.

2. Royal Duty
A stoic Queen’s Guard stands facing a brick wall, apparently urinating—his stream implied by a wet streak below. The piece mocks British ceremony and military formality with an act of childish rebellion.


3. Flag Factory
A young child sits on the pavement working a sewing machine, churning out Union Jack bunting. A bleak comment on child labor and the hidden cost of nationalism, first revealed around the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee in 2012.


4. Monkey Parliament
The British House of Commons reimagined—filled entirely with chimpanzees. This full-room oil painting ridicules political theatrics, suggesting little difference between Parliament and a zoo.

5. Tourist and Rickshaw
Two tourists take a selfie from a rickshaw pulled by a struggling child. The social divide is blunt: privilege resting on the labor of those unseen, overworked, or ignored.

6. Dreams Cancelled
A public worker with a roller has painted a red “CANCELLED” stamp over the words “Follow Your Dreams.” Stark commentary on broken promises, systemic failure, and the collapse of working-class hope.

7. Luxury Rentals Only
Hermit crabs march toward a sign marked “Luxury Rentals Only.” One wears a larger shell, excluding the others. A biting metaphor for housing inequality and gentrification on the British coast.

8. Red Line
A businessman drives a red upward-trending graph while silhouettes of refugees, children, and elders flee. A stark visualization of how economic policy tramples human lives.

9. Lifestyle Out of Stock
On a massive billboard: “Sorry! The lifestyle you ordered is currently out of stock.” A dig at consumer dreams collapsing under reality, especially amid economic crisis.

10. Stop and Search
A young girl in a pink dress is frisked by a British policeman, with her teddy bear and suitcase nearby. The reversal—child as suspect, authority as aggressor—forces discomfort.

10. Broken Empire
A worker on a ladder chips away one star from the EU flag. Created during Brexit negotiations, the mural questions whether Britain’s exit is liberation—or self-destruction.
More Banksy!: 24 artworks by Banksy: Who Is The Visionary of Street Art?
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