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Stop and Search, 2007

BY

A Study in Authority, Suspicion, and the Quiet Theatre of Control

“Banksy would doubtless have you believe this print is an ironic comment on the paranoid nature of our security-minded times.
But seriously, how much is this guy courting the pink pound?
It’s got a man in uniform, latex, and Dorothy herself all in one spanky package.”

With Stop and Search, Banksy delivers one of his most controlled and unsettling compositions, built not on spectacle but on subtle imbalance. The work does not rely on confrontation or inversion. Instead, it presents a seemingly ordinary interaction, one that unfolds with calm precision yet carries a profound sense of discomfort. In this restrained scene, authority is exercised not violently, but routinely, almost casually.


 Introduction


The composition is intimate and carefully staged. A uniformed officer stands beside a young girl unmistakably styled after Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz. She holds a small woven basket, while a tiny dog, echoing Toto, sits attentively at her side. The reference is immediate, almost cinematic. The officer, wearing protective gloves, methodically inspects the contents of her basket. His posture is calm, procedural, devoid of aggression. The gesture is controlled, practiced, almost indifferent.

Stop and Search, 2007
Edition: 500 signed

The girl, by contrast, looks on with a mixture of uncertainty and quiet concern. She does not resist, nor does she fully understand. Her body remains still, her presence defined by compliance rather than agency. There is no background, no setting, no narrative expansion. The white space isolates the interaction, transforming it into a kind of suspended moment: an everyday act, stripped of context, made visible


Suspicion Without Cause


At its core, Stop and Search is about the extension of suspicion into innocence. The girl represents a figure universally associated with purity, storytelling, and childhood imagination. By invoking Dorothy, Banksy introduces a cultural symbol of naivety and wonder. Yet here, she is subjected to scrutiny.

The officer does not appear violent. He does not threaten. And this is precisely what sharpens the work. The image suggests: a world in which suspicion becomes automatic, and where authority no longer requires justification, and more importantly where innocence does not exempt. The act of searching is not presented as exceptional. It is procedural, normalized, almost banal.

Stop and Search illustrates a theme dear to Banksy: defiance towards authority and law enforcement, a topic he revisits in many of his works. 

Stop and Search, Jerusalem, 2007

For example, a mural by the same name appeared in Palestine in 2013 except that. in this work, it is the school age girl in a pink dress searching the soldier. This is a classic, humoristic twist employed by the artist whereby the roles are reversed to further highlight how unfair, absurd, and excessive he feels the state’s reach has become.

 


Dorothy: Cultural Memory Displaced


The reference to The Wizard of Oz introduces an additional layer of complexity. Dorothy is not simply a child; she is a cultural archetype. She belongs to a world of narrative innocence, where danger exists but is ultimately resolved, where order is restored.

By placing her in a situation of inspection and control, Banksy disrupts this expectation. The familiar is repositioned within a system that does not belong to it. The gesture is subtle, yet effective. It suggests that even the most protected figures, even those anchored in collective imagination, are not exempt from the reach of authority.

The presence of the dog reinforces this tension. Small, attentive, and silent, it becomes a witness to the scene, grounding it further in the language of domesticity while offering no resistance or intervention.


Lesson


Stop and Search stands as one of Banksy’s most refined explorations of authority. Its strength lies in its restraint. There is no excess, no visual noise, no overt message. And yet, the image lingers. It resonates because it captures a shift that is difficult to articulate: the movement from justified authority to automatic suspicion, and the erosion of boundaries between protection and control. Within Banksy’s body of work, it marks a moment of precision—where critique is no longer shouted but quietly demonstrated.

Stop and Search, Glastonbury, 2007

A policeman searches a child’s basket. The gesture is calm. Routine. Unremarkable. Nothing interrupts the scene. Nothing resists it. And in that quiet normality lies the full weight of the work. Banksy does not show authority at its most extreme. He shows it at its most accepted. Which is, perhaps, where it becomes most powerful.

 

 


Description


 Stop and Search

Medium: Screenprint in colors on Arches wove paper
Year: 2007
Size: 76×56 cm (30×22 inches)

Publisher: Pictures on Walls, London

Edition: 500 signed

Numbering and Signature
Signed in blue crayon, lower right
Numbered /500 in pencil, with the publisher’s blindstamp, lower left


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