We’ve spent years hypothesising over the most well-known, enigmatic street artist, Banksy. Scientists earlier in the year claimed to have determined his identity using techniques commonly used for tracking down serial killers. Others theorised Banksy’s actually a woman, or a whole throng of anonymous artists working together. Now, a resurfaced video appears to show him doing an interview on-camera.

The 4-minute long clip from Channel 4 show Shadow People in 1995 profiles a man with dark hair and glasses – although it’s blurry and facial features can’t be determined – talking about his work as an undercover street artist, as Artnet reports.

“The nighttime brings a different energy to the city,” he explained. “I love it when the city’s quiet. When you’re the only person out in the city, you feel like you can get away with murder.”

Footage shows the man working with stencils and spray paint on a new piece. The clip also shows one of Banksy’s major pieces, the Flower Bomber. “Every time I see a wall I haven’t painted, I get a nagging feeling about it,” he added.

When discussing working with major players in the art industry, he observed: “I’ve decided I don’t ever want to do a gallery show. Saatchi came to me with a lot of money and I told him to fuck off.”

Though he’s snubbed big galleries and art industry bosses over the years, Banksy opened his dark, satirical “Bemusement” park, Dismaland, last year in Weston-super-Mare. It was his first exhibition since the Banksy v Bristol Museum show in 2009.

“It’s not about the money; I don’t paint for anybody else – I don’t paint for critics,” the-possible-Banksy continued in the video.

He also explained his method of evading the police when creating his illegal art, choosing to “make out like I’m pissed, and I’m puking out on the corner”.

Showcasing a man with dark hair and glasses, the clip lends to the suggestion that Banksy is artist Robin Gunningham. Gunningham grew up in Bristol, where he picked up on graffiti before moving to London in 2000, at around the same time of Banksy’s first unofficial exhibition in a Shoreditch tunnel. The figure could also arguably resemble Massive Attack’s Robert Del Naja, who back in September denied being the man behind Banksy. Del Naja has been an active graffiti artist under the moniker 3D.

Though his identity is still very much a mystery, it’s intriguing to see into the mind of the street art enigma. “There’s that beautiful time of when you get home after you’ve finished, and you’ve done it and you’ve fucked them…and you’ve gotten away with what you want to do. It’s a great feeling. I guess that’s why I do it.”