Banksy – Napalm (Unsigned)
Price on Application
Medium: 3 colour screen print on untreated cartridge paper
Edition: 500
Size: 70 x 50 cm (excl. frame)
Framed Size: 85 x 66 x 4 cm
Year: 2004
Description: Comes with full pest control certificate of authenticity (COA)
Condition: Very good
Framing: Framed to full museum standard with Optium Museum Acrylic in a powder coated metal frame by CommonRoom Projects, London
Framing: Framed to full museum standard with Optium Museum Acrylic in a powder coated metal frame by CommonRoom Projects, London
As featured at ‘Banksy Editions Volume I’
GraffitiStreet Collector Assurance:
Banksy’s Napalm (Unsigned), offered by GraffitiStreet, is accompanied by a full Pest Control Certificate of Authenticity (COA). Each work is meticulously inspected, professionally photographed, and supplied with a detailed condition report. Every piece is framed to museum standard using archival materials and shipped worldwide under full insurance via specialist art couriers, ensuring its long term value is protected as carefully as its cultural significance.
Contact us for more information on how to purchase this piece.
To enquire about this product, please complete the form below.
Phan Thị Kim Phúc: Icon of Resilience and Peace
Phan Thị Kim Phúc, immortalised in one of the most harrowing images of the 20th century, transformed unimaginable suffering into a lifelong pursuit of peace and humanitarian advocacy. Severely burned by napalm during the Vietnam War, Kim became an emblem of innocence caught in the crossfire of global conflict. Her legacy was poignantly recontextualised in Banksy’s Napalm (2004), a visual allegory that juxtaposes Kim’s fragile figure with the commercial mascots Mickey Mouse and Ronald McDonald, icons of Western capitalism, framing a stark critique of war and cultural complicity.
Following 17 surgeries and recovery, Kim’s journey evolved to a beautiful transformation. As the founder of the Kim Phúc Foundation International and a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador, she has dedicated her life to healing the wounds of war, both seen and unseen. Her guiding ethos, “Forgiveness made me free from hatred,” stands as a testament to the human capacity for grace amid devastation.
Kim Phúc is no longer simply “the girl in the picture.” She is a beacon of courage, compassion, and resilience. Her story continues to resonate across generations, reminding us that the scars of conflict may endure, but so too does the power of empathy and reconciliation. Through her voice and Banksy’s enduring artwork, the call for peace becomes not just a political statement, but a deeply human imperative.





