Banksy Statue Appears on Waterloo Place in London
A new banksy statue appeared on Waterloo Place in central London on the morning of 29 April 2026. The work shows a suited figure standing on a plinth, caught mid-stride, with its face hidden by a billowing flag.
Banksy had not used his official channels, Instagram, or website to claim the piece. His signature was engraved discreetly on the reverse of the plinth.
Waterloo Place
The placement put the work in a stretch of central London built as a ceremonial display of power. Waterloo Place was conceived in the early nineteenth century to commemorate victory over Napoleon, and it forms a grand extension of Regent Street.
The setting is lined with statues of imperial figures and military leaders, anchored by Carlton House Terrace and the Athenaeum Club. A gilded figure of Athena has watched over the street for nearly two centuries.
Plinth and figure
The statue’s figure appears to be moving beyond the edge of the plinth, which gives the piece a sense of motion rather than a fixed pose. The flag covering the face leaves the figure anonymous, while the suited clothing places it in direct contrast with the surrounding monuments.
The source said the monuments around the new arrival were built to make power appear inevitable. Against that backdrop, the statue’s position on Waterloo Place turns the plinth itself into part of the message, not just a base for the figure above it.
Banksy channels
Banksy had not confirmed the work through his official channels at the time of its appearance. That leaves the statue in the familiar space between public installation and authorial claim, with the signature on the plinth doing the attribution work on its own.
For now, the only fixed facts are the location, the timing, and the image: a suited figure, a covered face, and a central London setting that places the work directly among monuments tied to state power.