Street artist Banksy has unveiled his eighth London mural in eight days, depicting a rhino riding on a Nissan Micra with a traffic cone on the bonnet.
The painting was discovered in Charlton, south-east London, and was identified on Banksy’s Instagram account.
This comes a day after he painted a picture of a swimming piranha at a City of London police sentry box, which was first spotted on Sunday morning.
The translucent fish is the seventh in a series of animal-themed art installations being rolled out across the capital.
Last Monday a goat appeared on the side of a building near Kew Bridge, followed on Tuesday by footage of two elephants touching their trunks on the side of a house in Chelsea.
Three monkeys dangling from Brick Lane Bridge drew crowds on Wednesday.
A statue of a howling wolf mounted on a satellite dish was installed on the roof of a garage in Peckham on Thursday, looking as if the animal was howling at the moon.
However, several hours passed before men were seen taking it down and carrying it away along Rye Street.
Banksy’s PR team confirmed that the artist has no connection to or support for the theft of the wolf design and has “no knowledge of the current whereabouts of the plate.”
On Friday, a Walthamstow resident woke up to find two pelicans fishing on top of their fish shop.
And on Saturday, a stencil of a stretching cat appeared on a vacant sign in Cricklewood.
The crowd booed as the sign in Cricklewood was taken down by three men who claimed to have been “hired” by a “contractor” for safety reasons.
On Monday, at the historic Old Bailey, Judge Mark Lucraft KC dismissed a jury who had been unable to reach a verdict in a trial for death by careless driving, suggesting they instead go see a nearby Banksy artwork and enjoy the weather.