
Banksy Tour in Bristol (Self Guided), Bristol
Bristol wears its street art like a second skin—layered, loud, and impossible to ignore. In the middle of this visual conversation is a figure who went from spray-painting in the shadows to shaping the way the world looks at graffiti: Banksy. Growing up here in the 1970s, he first made his mark in the late ’80s and early ’90s with crews like the DryBreadZ Crew, working freehand under cover of night. It was risky, fast, and rough around the edges—exactly the kind of environment that honed his instincts for both stealth and statement.
The turning point came when he swapped the slower grind of freehand for the speed and precision of stencils. Suddenly, his work could appear in minutes instead of hours, and the bold, instantly recognizable style he’s now known for began to take shape. By the early 2000s, he was sending out images laced with irony and political bite, all while keeping his identity a mystery. That anonymity wasn’t just a gimmick—it forced people to talk about the message, not the man. “The Mild Mild West” and “Rose on a Mousetrap” are checkpoints from that period.
From there, the leap was meteoric. Banksy went from being part of Bristol’s graffiti engine to steering it—and then exporting it—becoming a cultural heavyweight whose pieces could spark headlines, sway opinions. Through it all, his art still had the habit of appearing where you least expected it, keeping the same rebellious DNA from his early days. His increasing boldness is portrayed in “Well Hung Lover” and “Queen Ziggy”.
Bristol hasn’t let go of its hometown provocateur. Works like The Mild Mild West and Well Hung Lover are woven into the city’s fabric, sharing wall space with Girl With a Pierced Eardrum and Queen Ziggy. They’re not locked behind glass; they’re part of the street’s pulse, weathering with the brick and the rain.
By letting the city embrace you, you are literally walking through Banksy's timeline, gritty, not the prettiest, but certainly full of character. He is an inspiration to Bristol and he is waiting in the shadows to make his opinion known.
The turning point came when he swapped the slower grind of freehand for the speed and precision of stencils. Suddenly, his work could appear in minutes instead of hours, and the bold, instantly recognizable style he’s now known for began to take shape. By the early 2000s, he was sending out images laced with irony and political bite, all while keeping his identity a mystery. That anonymity wasn’t just a gimmick—it forced people to talk about the message, not the man. “The Mild Mild West” and “Rose on a Mousetrap” are checkpoints from that period.
From there, the leap was meteoric. Banksy went from being part of Bristol’s graffiti engine to steering it—and then exporting it—becoming a cultural heavyweight whose pieces could spark headlines, sway opinions. Through it all, his art still had the habit of appearing where you least expected it, keeping the same rebellious DNA from his early days. His increasing boldness is portrayed in “Well Hung Lover” and “Queen Ziggy”.
Bristol hasn’t let go of its hometown provocateur. Works like The Mild Mild West and Well Hung Lover are woven into the city’s fabric, sharing wall space with Girl With a Pierced Eardrum and Queen Ziggy. They’re not locked behind glass; they’re part of the street’s pulse, weathering with the brick and the rain.
By letting the city embrace you, you are literally walking through Banksy's timeline, gritty, not the prettiest, but certainly full of character. He is an inspiration to Bristol and he is waiting in the shadows to make his opinion known.
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Banksy Tour in Bristol Map
Guide Name: Banksy Tour in Bristol
Guide Location: England » Bristol (See other walking tours in Bristol)
Guide Type: Self-guided Walking Tour (Sightseeing)
# of Attractions: 7
Tour Duration: 3 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 6.9 Km or 4.3 Miles
Author: DanaOffice
Sight(s) Featured in This Guide:
Guide Location: England » Bristol (See other walking tours in Bristol)
Guide Type: Self-guided Walking Tour (Sightseeing)
# of Attractions: 7
Tour Duration: 3 Hour(s)
Travel Distance: 6.9 Km or 4.3 Miles
Author: DanaOffice
Sight(s) Featured in This Guide:
- Girl with a Pierced Eardrum
- Bristol City Museum & Art Gallery
- Banksy - Well Hung Lover
- Queen Ziggy
- The Mild Mild West
- Rose on a Mousetrap
- Cat and Dog
1) Girl with a Pierced Eardrum
If you’re wandering along Bristol’s Harbourside and spot a classic gone rogue, you’ve found Banksy’s Girl with a Pierced Eardrum. Painted in October 2014 on the side of a Hanover Place building—handily located between the clock tower and a burger van—it takes the Dutch master’s Girl with a Pearl Earring and swaps the jewel for… a security alarm. It’s Banksy doing what he does best: blending fine art references with a sly jab at modern surveillance culture, all in sharp-edged stencil form.
Its arrival was perfectly timed, appearing just after breathless headlines claimed the artist had been arrested and unmasked. Within a day, someone treated it to a splash of black paint—street art’s version of a handshake. Far from spoiling it, the drips arguably gave the piece another layer of texture.
True to Bristol’s habit of letting its art evolve with the times, the girl gained a blue surgical mask in 2020, a low-key nod to the pandemic years. Like much of the city’s street art, it wears its history in layers: paint, politics, and passing moments.
Part of the fun is that it’s exactly where it was painted—no gallery glass, no neat labels—just a building wall by the docks, framed by old warehouses, cafés, and other murals. Whether you’re a Banksy devotee or just someone with a coffee in hand, it’s worth the short detour to see how a single security alarm, in the right hands, can upstage an Old Master.
Its arrival was perfectly timed, appearing just after breathless headlines claimed the artist had been arrested and unmasked. Within a day, someone treated it to a splash of black paint—street art’s version of a handshake. Far from spoiling it, the drips arguably gave the piece another layer of texture.
True to Bristol’s habit of letting its art evolve with the times, the girl gained a blue surgical mask in 2020, a low-key nod to the pandemic years. Like much of the city’s street art, it wears its history in layers: paint, politics, and passing moments.
Part of the fun is that it’s exactly where it was painted—no gallery glass, no neat labels—just a building wall by the docks, framed by old warehouses, cafés, and other murals. Whether you’re a Banksy devotee or just someone with a coffee in hand, it’s worth the short detour to see how a single security alarm, in the right hands, can upstage an Old Master.
2) Bristol City Museum & Art Gallery (must see)
The Bristol City Museum & Art Gallery has been holding court in its ornate Edwardian Baroque home since 1905, all carved stone, sweeping staircases, and a sense of civic grandeur that feels worlds away from the city’s gritty industrial past. Built as a temple to learning and culture, it remains free to enter—meaning you can wander past Egyptian mummies, Assyrian reliefs, taxidermy, glittering ceramics, and paintings by the likes of the Pre-Raphaelites, which were a group of painters founded in 1848. The collections pull you through centuries and continents, pausing for a good dose of Bristol’s own story, from maritime exploits to the less-than-glorious sides of global trade.
And then there’s Banksy. The museum is home to his Paint Pot Angel, a classical figure with a splash of pink rebellion across its head, scandalizing the sculpture hall. Back in 2009, Banksy staged his infamous “Banksy vs. Bristol Museum” takeover here—an all-out, tongue-in-cheek hijacking that saw the galleries filled with irreverent surprises, and the queues stretching halfway across the city. The show may have packed up long ago, but its echoes still rattle through the building.
Today, the museum continues to shuffle the old with the new, giving you a straight path from ancient tombs to contemporary provocation—no time machine required.
And then there’s Banksy. The museum is home to his Paint Pot Angel, a classical figure with a splash of pink rebellion across its head, scandalizing the sculpture hall. Back in 2009, Banksy staged his infamous “Banksy vs. Bristol Museum” takeover here—an all-out, tongue-in-cheek hijacking that saw the galleries filled with irreverent surprises, and the queues stretching halfway across the city. The show may have packed up long ago, but its echoes still rattle through the building.
Today, the museum continues to shuffle the old with the new, giving you a straight path from ancient tombs to contemporary provocation—no time machine required.
3) Banksy - Well Hung Lover
On the wall of a former sexual health clinic, five metres above Frogmore Street, a naked man hangs by one arm from a windowsill, his free hand strategically placed. Above him, a suited figure leans out, scanning the street for the lover he can’t see. Beside him, a woman in lingerie rests her hand on his shoulder, a picture of guilty calm. The scene is Banksy at full voltage – sly, economical, and loaded with visual innuendo.
The mural appeared in 2006, after three days behind tarpaulin-wrapped scaffolding. When the cover came off, Bristol found itself staring at a home-grown scandal in spray paint. The Council had been on a mission to scrub graffiti from the city, but this one hit a nerve. The building’s owner at the time – a member of Massive Attack music group – had commissioned it, and when the Council later bought the property, they put it to the people. Ninety-seven percent voted to let it stay.
That vote made Well Hung Lover the first street piece in the UK to receive official blessing after the fact. The clinic moved on, the mural stayed put, and its survival became part of Bristol’s civic identity – cheeky, defiant. Even paintball vandals couldn’t take that away; they just added another layer to the story.
The mural appeared in 2006, after three days behind tarpaulin-wrapped scaffolding. When the cover came off, Bristol found itself staring at a home-grown scandal in spray paint. The Council had been on a mission to scrub graffiti from the city, but this one hit a nerve. The building’s owner at the time – a member of Massive Attack music group – had commissioned it, and when the Council later bought the property, they put it to the people. Ninety-seven percent voted to let it stay.
That vote made Well Hung Lover the first street piece in the UK to receive official blessing after the fact. The clinic moved on, the mural stayed put, and its survival became part of Bristol’s civic identity – cheeky, defiant. Even paintball vandals couldn’t take that away; they just added another layer to the story.
4) Queen Ziggy
Picture it—Bristol, 2012. The bunting’s barely hung for the Diamond Jubilee when, overnight, a certain wall on Upper Maudlin Street acquires a new sovereign. Not the sort you’ll find on coins, but a monochrome Queen Elizabeth II, crown polished, pearls gleaming… and a bolt of red and blue lightning slicing across her face. It’s a clear nod to Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust—royalty meets glam rock, all in one sideways glance. Locals dubbed her “Queen Ziggy,” and while Banksy never stepped forward to claim parentage, the timing, wit, and Bristol postcode all pointed in his direction.
The spot itself has a past—it’s no stranger to Banksy’s handiwork—and it sits right by the Grand Appeal charity, fundraising lifeline for the Children’s Hospital next door. The mural’s arrival sparked a flurry of interpretations. Was it a love letter to the Queen, a pop-culture mash-up, or a cheeky riff on power and celebrity? Maybe all three. After all, Bowie and the monarchy have each ruled their own kingdoms—just not usually on the same wall.
For the wandering visitor, Queen Ziggy isn’t background scenery—it’s an unmissable flash of personality in the city’s visual conversation. That lightning bolt, cutting through the grey, has a way of pulling you up short, reminding you that Bristol’s walls don’t just host art—they throw opinions, jokes, and sly winks into the street. Here, tradition doesn’t gather dust; it gets remixed with a soundtrack, a splash of colour, and the sort of irreverence that refuses to fade.
The spot itself has a past—it’s no stranger to Banksy’s handiwork—and it sits right by the Grand Appeal charity, fundraising lifeline for the Children’s Hospital next door. The mural’s arrival sparked a flurry of interpretations. Was it a love letter to the Queen, a pop-culture mash-up, or a cheeky riff on power and celebrity? Maybe all three. After all, Bowie and the monarchy have each ruled their own kingdoms—just not usually on the same wall.
For the wandering visitor, Queen Ziggy isn’t background scenery—it’s an unmissable flash of personality in the city’s visual conversation. That lightning bolt, cutting through the grey, has a way of pulling you up short, reminding you that Bristol’s walls don’t just host art—they throw opinions, jokes, and sly winks into the street. Here, tradition doesn’t gather dust; it gets remixed with a soundtrack, a splash of colour, and the sort of irreverence that refuses to fade.
5) The Mild Mild West
Back in the late ’90s, Stokes Croft was already Bristol’s unofficial laboratory for bold ideas, loud nights, and walls that spoke their mind. Then one day in 1999, a new voice appeared—painted in broad daylight by Banksy—where a solicitor’s office wall became the stage for The Mild Mild West. A teddy bear, all fluff and mischief, is caught mid-throw with a Molotov cocktail aimed at three riot police. It’s playful at a glance, but rooted in a sharp protest against the police crackdowns on the city’s unlicensed raves, particularly a notorious clash on Winterstoke Road.
The title winks at Bristol’s easy-going reputation while hinting at the heat under the surface. Locals embraced it almost instantly, seeing a reflection of Stokes Croft’s personality: friendly and open, but ready to stand its ground when pushed. Its spot at a busy junction makes it impossible to miss, ensuring its message still rolls through the daily life of the city.
Around it, cafés hum, independent shops keep the “Do It Yourself” spirit alive, and other walls carry their own loud, colourful opinions.
Stand here for a moment and you’ll catch more than just a snapshot of street art—you’ll hear the long-running conversation between Bristol’s creative soul and the forces that try to tame it. And judging by that teddy’s aim, the debate isn’t over yet.
The title winks at Bristol’s easy-going reputation while hinting at the heat under the surface. Locals embraced it almost instantly, seeing a reflection of Stokes Croft’s personality: friendly and open, but ready to stand its ground when pushed. Its spot at a busy junction makes it impossible to miss, ensuring its message still rolls through the daily life of the city.
Around it, cafés hum, independent shops keep the “Do It Yourself” spirit alive, and other walls carry their own loud, colourful opinions.
Stand here for a moment and you’ll catch more than just a snapshot of street art—you’ll hear the long-running conversation between Bristol’s creative soul and the forces that try to tame it. And judging by that teddy’s aim, the debate isn’t over yet.
6) Rose on a Mousetrap
In Bristol’s Cotham district, down the quiet stretch of Thomas Street North, there’s a Banksy that doesn't try too hard. Rose on a Mousetrap, painted in the early 2000s, pairs a delicate bloom with a steel-jawed trap, an image that can be read as love caught in a snare, beauty under siege, or simply a dark little joke in floral form. It’s a rare example of Banksy going for subtle over spectacle, drawing you in with its quiet sting rather than a billboard-sized blast of politics.
When it first appeared, the locals didn’t just admire it—they mobilised. About twenty neighbours pooled funds to buy glass and a frame, turning this modest mural into Bristol’s only framed Banksy. The protective casing wasn’t just about preserving paint; it was a statement of ownership and affection. Here was a piece they weren’t going to let be scrawled over, chipped away, or whisked off to auction.
For visitors, finding Rose on a Mousetrap isn’t like stumbling across Banksy’s high-profile pieces in Stokes Croft or the city centre. It sits in a residential patch, far from the footfall of tourists chasing guidebook hotspots. That makes seeing it feel a bit like being let in on a secret, the kind of thing a local might point out on the way to the corner shop. Its survival—thanks to that communal act of preservation—says as much about Bristol’s relationship with its street art as the image itself. Here, even the quietest works get to grow old in peace, frame and all.
When it first appeared, the locals didn’t just admire it—they mobilised. About twenty neighbours pooled funds to buy glass and a frame, turning this modest mural into Bristol’s only framed Banksy. The protective casing wasn’t just about preserving paint; it was a statement of ownership and affection. Here was a piece they weren’t going to let be scrawled over, chipped away, or whisked off to auction.
For visitors, finding Rose on a Mousetrap isn’t like stumbling across Banksy’s high-profile pieces in Stokes Croft or the city centre. It sits in a residential patch, far from the footfall of tourists chasing guidebook hotspots. That makes seeing it feel a bit like being let in on a secret, the kind of thing a local might point out on the way to the corner shop. Its survival—thanks to that communal act of preservation—says as much about Bristol’s relationship with its street art as the image itself. Here, even the quietest works get to grow old in peace, frame and all.
7) Cat and Dog
If you wander into Bristol’s Easton neighbourhood and spot a feline loitering with an aerosol can, you’ve just found Cat and Dog—an early Banksy that predates the sharp-edged stencils he’s now known for. Painted at the junction of Robertson Road and Foster Street during his days with the DryBreadZ Crew (DBZ for short), it’s pure late-90s street energy: freehand, unpolished, and buzzing with the city’s then-growing graffiti scene.
The scene pairs a spray-can-wielding cat with two watchful dogs—equal parts bodyguards and bouncers—creating a standoff that teeters between playfulness and threat. Adding bite to the image is a quote scrawled beside it: “There are crimes that become innocent or even glorious through their splendour, number, and excess.” It’s the kind of lofty line that makes you wonder if the cat’s about to redecorate the wall or start a small revolution.
What makes Cat and Dog worth the detour isn’t just its design—it’s the glimpse it offers into Banksy’s creative adolescence. Here’s the artist before the bulletproof glass and tourist maps, back when his work was part of the everyday churn of the street. No protective barriers, no neat little plaque—just paint on brick, weathering with the seasons and the city’s life around it.
For anyone tracing Bristol’s Banksy trail, finding Cat and Dog feels less like ticking a box and more like stumbling across a living fossil from the city’s graffiti past. It’s a reminder that street art, at its best, isn’t curated—it’s simply there, holding its ground in the open air. And in this case, it’s got two dogs to help it keep watch.
The scene pairs a spray-can-wielding cat with two watchful dogs—equal parts bodyguards and bouncers—creating a standoff that teeters between playfulness and threat. Adding bite to the image is a quote scrawled beside it: “There are crimes that become innocent or even glorious through their splendour, number, and excess.” It’s the kind of lofty line that makes you wonder if the cat’s about to redecorate the wall or start a small revolution.
What makes Cat and Dog worth the detour isn’t just its design—it’s the glimpse it offers into Banksy’s creative adolescence. Here’s the artist before the bulletproof glass and tourist maps, back when his work was part of the everyday churn of the street. No protective barriers, no neat little plaque—just paint on brick, weathering with the seasons and the city’s life around it.
For anyone tracing Bristol’s Banksy trail, finding Cat and Dog feels less like ticking a box and more like stumbling across a living fossil from the city’s graffiti past. It’s a reminder that street art, at its best, isn’t curated—it’s simply there, holding its ground in the open air. And in this case, it’s got two dogs to help it keep watch.
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