Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
International

US-Banksy-NYC-Auction Banksy's ‘Broken Heart' painting defaced on a Brooklyn wall is up for sale

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 May, 2025 10:44 AM
  • US-Banksy-NYC-Auction Banksy's ‘Broken Heart' painting defaced on a Brooklyn wall is up for sale

NEW YORK (AP) — When the enigmatic street artist Banksy spray-painted a heart-shaped balloon covered with a Band-Aid on the wall of a Brooklyn warehouse, the nondescript brick building was instantly transformed into an art destination and the canvas of an unlikely graffiti battle.

Almost as soon as Banksy revealed the piece back in 2013, an anonymous tagger brazenly walked up and spray painted the words “Omar NYC” in red beside the balloon, to the dismay of onlookers.

Days later, someone stenciled “is a little girl” in white and pink beside Omar’s tag, followed by a seemingly sarcastic phrase in black: “I remember MY first tag.” Some think it was Banksy himself who secretly returned to the scene to add the rejoinder.

The apparent graffiti battle didn’t end there. Another tagger also attempted to leave his mark but was stymied by security guards. Today the phrase “SHAN” is still visible in light purple paint.

Maria Georgiadis, whose family owned the now-demolished warehouse and ultimately removed the section of wall to preserve the artwork, says the graffiti pastiche isquintessentially New York.

“It looks like a war going on,” she said recently. “They’re literally going at it on the wall.”

Artwork up for auction

The preserved wall, dubbed “Battle to Survive a BrokenHeart,” will be going up for sale May 21 at Guernsey’s, the New York auction house.

Georgiadis, a Brooklyn schoolteacher, says the sale isbittersweet. Her father, Vassilios Georgiadis, ran his roofing and asbestos abatement company from the warehouse adorned with the balloon.

He died four years ago at age 67 from a heart attack, which iswhy some of the proceeds from the sale will be donated to the American Heart Association.

“It’s just very significant to us because he loved it and he was just so full of love,” Maria Georgiadis said on a recent visit to the art warehouse where the piece was stored for more than a decade. “It’s like the bandage heart. We all have love, but we’ve all went through things and we just put a little Band-Aid over and just keep on moving, right? That’s how I take it.”

The nearly 4-ton, 6-foot-tall (3.6-metric ton, 1.8-meter-tall) wall section is one of a number of guerrilla works the famously secretive British artist made during a New York residency in 2013.

At the time, Banksy heralded the work by posting on his website photos and an audio track recorded partly in asqueaky, helium-induced voice.

Banksy may not have painted response to tagger

Guernsey auction house President Arlan Ettinger said it isimpossible to know for certain because Banksy works clandestinely. But he said the neat stenciling and wording “strongly suggest that this was a gentle way for Banksy to put the other artist in his place.”

Ulrich Blanché, an art history lecturer at Heidelberg University in Germany, called the piece a “very well executed” stencil notable partly because of Banksy's decision to place it in Brooklyn’s port area of Red Hook.

“This part of NYC was not easy to reach at that time,” he said by email. “Banksy wanted people to go to places in NYC they never have seen and love them as well.”

But Blanche questioned whether the additional stenciled text was truly the work of Banksy, saying the word choice and design don’t appear to comport with the artist’s style at the time.

“To call a graffiti guy a ‘girl’ is not something Banksy would do in 2013. This is misogynic and immature in a sexist way,” he wrote. “Three different fonts that do not match and three colors — why should he do that? Too unnecessarily elaborated without reasons. So I think this was added by someone else.”

Blanché also said he is ambivalent about the pending sale, noting Banksy usually doesn't authorize his street pieces forsale. At the same time, he understands the burden placed onproperty owners to protect and maintain them.

Banksy’s works should be preserved, but for the community they were made for,” he said. “They should not be turned into goods. They are made and thought for a specific location. Not portable. Not sellable.”

Spokespersons for Banksy didn't respond to an email seeking comment.

Difficult to determine price

Maria Georgiadis’ brother, Anastasios, said his father had also hoped to keep the piece in Red Hook after having cut it out of the wall and framed in thick steel for safekeeping.

The elder Georgiadis, he said, envisioned the work as the centerpiece of a retail and housing development on the property, a dream he didn't realize. The property has since been sold off by the family.

Ettinger said it is difficult to say what the piece might fetch. There is little precedent for a sale of a Banksy piece of this size, he said.

In 2018, a canvas that was part of Banksy's “Girl With Balloon” series sold in London for 1.04 million pounds ($1.4 million), only to famously self-destruct in front of a stunned auction crowd.

Maria Georgiadis said she hopes whoever buys the ”BrokenHeart” finds the same beauty and meaning her father drew from the piece.

When Banksy painted it, the family business had been recovering from destructive floods caused by Hurricane Sandythe prior year. Georgiadis recalls her father had no idea who Banksy was but was moved by the simple image.

“My dad had it in his head that Banksy knew what we went through,” she said. “He goes, ‘Can you believe it Maria? It’s aheart.’”

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Julie Jacobson

MORE International ARTICLES

Ambulance service apologises after UK Sikh woman dies waiting

Ambulance service apologises after UK Sikh woman dies waiting
An ambulance service has apologised to a Sikh family for making them wait for 72 minutes for paramedics to reach a 44-year-old woman who later died from a stroke in 2022 in North of England. Jasbir Pahal, a mother of four and a teaching assistant from Huddersfield, died after she suffered a "massive" stroke in the early hours of a Sunday morning in November 2022, the BBC reported. 

Ambulance service apologises after UK Sikh woman dies waiting

Israel strikes outskirts of Gaza City during second ground raid

Israel strikes outskirts of Gaza City during second ground raid
Israeli forces conducted another ground raid in Gaza in advance of an expected invasion of the Hamas-ruled territory. U.S. warplanes, meanwhile, struck targets in eastern Syria after attacks on U.S. forces by Iran-backed fighters, adding to regional tensions fuelled by the three-week-old Gaza war.  

Israel strikes outskirts of Gaza City during second ground raid

Israel urges India to ban Hamas

Israel urges India to ban Hamas
Israel is urging India to designate Hamas, the militant group that runs Gaza, as a terrorist organisation, like the United States and the European Union have done in the past, Israeli Ambassador to India Naor Gilon said on Wednesday. Hamas is not on the Indian government’s list of banned organisations.   

Israel urges India to ban Hamas

Elderly Sikh man dies after being repeatedly punched in US: Report

Elderly Sikh man dies after being repeatedly punched in US: Report
An elderly Sikh man hit his head and died after he was punched repeatedly by a 30-year-old man following a car accident in New York City, a media report said. Jasmer Singh, 66, was rushed to Jamaica Hospital Medical Center in Queens in critical condition where he died of a brain injury a day after he was assaulted on October 19.  

Elderly Sikh man dies after being repeatedly punched in US: Report

Talk of a leadership challenge to UK PM Rishi Sunak

Talk of a leadership challenge to UK PM Rishi Sunak
Less than a year into his premiership and a visit to India said to be in the offing to sign a trade treaty, Rishi Sunak, who is of Indian origin, could be in slight danger of a leadership challenge after a disastrous night for his Conservative party in by-elections. The Conservatives lost two safe House of Commons seats in the early hours of Friday.  

Talk of a leadership challenge to UK PM Rishi Sunak

Nijjar's killing: Australian intel chief says 'no reason to dispute' Trudeau’s claim

Nijjar's killing: Australian intel chief says 'no reason to dispute' Trudeau’s claim
Australia's domestic intelligence chief has said that he has "no reason to dispute" Canadian PM Justin Trudeau's claim of the Indian government's role in the killing of Sikh separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in June this year. The accusations, which came last month, kicked up a diplomatic row between India and Canada with both nations expelling a diplomat each and New Delhi dismissing the claims as "absurd".

Nijjar's killing: Australian intel chief says 'no reason to dispute' Trudeau’s claim