•  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
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Current Exhibition

SELECTED WORKS BY Brian Griffiths

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Brian Griffiths
Boneshaker

2003

wood, various

242 x 230 x 500cm
Brian Griffiths is a backyard crusader for the sticky stuff of legend. His monumental scale sculptures are portals for adventure: cardboard box space ships, garbage bin knights, and bathroom caulking astronauts. Boneshaker is a magical time-travelling gypsy caravan, entirely constructed from tables and hand-carved wooden ornaments found in South London antique markets. Griffiths trades on the ‘secret histories’ of the second-hand conversation pieces, using their authenticity to falsify an exotic, more ‘ancient’ history of his own.
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Brian Griffiths
Beneath the Stride of Giants

2004

wood

Length 12m (36ft) Width 2.5m (8ft) Hull Height 2.5m (8ft) Floor to mast height 6m (20ft) Stern Height 3.8m (12ft)
Brian Griffiths is a junk shop Viking; Beneath The Stride Of Giants is his own personal Valhalla. Working entirely with recycled materials, Griffiths’s adventure starts at second-hand furniture markets, each antique table and chiffonier is a conquest towards his ultimate campaign; his galleon is more than just a sculpture – it’s a monumental attempt to create something with real possibility.
For Griffiths it’s simply about matter over mind: mahogany veneer from the backs of Edwardian tallboys bows perfectly for the prow, a Victorian bureau makes for an ornate helm, bizarre little architectural cornices stand in for protective totems of ancient gods and monsters; the sails, made from fabric purchased at a gypsy market in Greece, were lovingly stitched together by his girlfriend.
The impedimenta of mystical voyage, the accoutrements of war; Griffiths creates an armada of imagination, a monumental epic of fantasy and legend.
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Brian Griffiths
Peter Lorre

2003

12 heads plaster and mixed media

28 x 16 x 14cm
Installed like gargoyles, Peter Lorre Time Machine is a series of casts taken from the Hollywood actor’s death mask. Each bust has been dressed to suggest traditional costumes from different historical periods. Norman soldier, Viking, Pharaoh and Caveman accessories have been fashioned from ornate crockery and cheap costume props. Each make-over or new role given to Lorre appears like a belated attempt to breathe life into the character actor’s inanimate features.

ARTICLES

brian griffiths - civic past and futurama
By John Slyce

Brian Griffiths' art is evidence of a kind of magic seldom realised beyond the frame of childhood. Cardboard, string, and sealing-wax often join with other fanciful stuff in the creation of self-sufficient worlds of imagination and delight.
Such spaces and scenarios are similar to those of our own everyday, and yet they ultimately depart from their origin in the here and now. They perhaps share a closer resemblance to the fantastic parallel worlds of early, particularly live, TV, theatre and cinema in the cobbled-together mise-en-scène and sound stage.

Griffiths is a collector and his Bermondsey studio is littered with piles of epic cultural fragments purchased at provincial car boot sales, or gathered from the London streets.

These source materials - ranging from old textbooks and popular science manuals, fifties and sixties furniture, film anthologies, remnants of cut linoleum, trashy novels, polystyrene packaging and broken umbrellas - are selected, continually referenced and referred to, and then collaged together materially and conceptually.

Read the entire article here
Source: guardian.co.uk


Brian Griffiths – When the World was Young

For his second solo exhibition for Vilma Gold, Brian Griffiths will present, a series of new sculptures, When The World was Young.

Brian Griffiths is best known for his life-size theatrical sculptures of medieval knights, spaceman and computers. Strong and familiar images are juxtaposed with quotidian, Lo-fi, materials to create fantastical hollow structures empty of internal organs and mechanics. When The World was Young compounds Griffiths’ interest in artifice and theatricality through, for the first time, direct references to theatre design, its mode of presentation and the role of the actor / character.

For When The World was Young centre stage will be dominated by a gigantic old world theatre wagon. Standing at around 5 x 4 x 2 metres the towering structure is assembled solely from 'antique' furniture and wooden trinkets salvaged from house clearance auctions and second-hand stores. Marquetry veneered wardrobes, round oak tables and hand carved mementoes have been intricately combined to form a magnificently decorated façade.

Read the entire article here
Source: vilmagold.com