“He was an actual innovator,” says Martin Parr, remembering fellow British photographer and longtime buddy, Brian Griffin, who died at dwelling in London final weekend, aged 75. “He actually livened up the entire world of portraiture. They [his portraits] had been so recognisably his. Nobody had ever seen something like them. And never many photographers can say that.”
Griffin is greatest identified for his iconic album covers, comparable to Depeche Mode’s A Damaged Body (1982) and Joe Jackson’s Look Sharp (1979), however he was far more than a rock photographer, injecting surreal narrative and noir lighting into business and editorial commissions, whereas pursuing his personal tasks. Griffin made no distinction between private and project work; he put equal power and ambition into each, all the time trying to create some playful visible disruption and make lasting, significant pictures.
He grew up within the Black Nation within the English Midlands, attributing the sights and sounds of heavy business as a significant affect upon his imagery.
Griffin gave up a job at British Metal on the finish of the Nineteen Sixties to review pictures at Manchester Polytechnic, the place he met Parr and Daniel Meadows. Afterwards, he moved to London to start his storied freelance profession, taking a portfolio of pictures of ballroom dancers to Roland Schenk at Administration In the present day. The celebrated Swiss artwork director instantly noticed his potential and inspired the younger photographer’s flights of creativeness in probably the most unlikely setting of company portraiture.
His private documentary work featured in landmark exhibitions within the Seventies, when Britain’s artwork institution started taking pictures critically, together with Hayward Gallery’s first main survey of up to date follow, Three Views (1979). The Eighties had been, nonetheless, his undoubted peak. Certainly, the Guardian hailed him “the photographer of the last decade”. Lots of his most well-known photos of musicians (Kate Bush, Siouxsie Sioux and Elvis Costello, to call however a couple of) had been made throughout this time, as was his most memorable large-scale fee, celebrating the completion of the Broadgate mission within the Metropolis of London.
He was broadly recognised for Work, printed in 1988, certainly one of many usually self-published books he produced all through his profession. And following an exhibition on the Rencontres d’Arles pictures competition in 1987, alongside the primary exhibiting of Nan Goldin’s Ballad of Sexual Dependency exterior the US, dozens extra reveals adopted, at dwelling within the UK and throughout Europe.
All through the Nineties, Griffin labored primarily as a director of TV commercials and music movies, returning to pictures in 2002 and choosing up the place he left off, taking pictures memorable campaigns for Reykjavik Vitality, the completion of the HSI railway, the town of Marseilles, and a prized fee for the London Olympic Video games in 2012. And among the many dozens of books and reveals he produced over the previous 15 years, there have been retrospectives within the UK, Iceland, Italy and Georgia. In 2021 he printed what was to be the primary half of his autobiography, Black Nation Dada, designed by Cafeteria, with whom he was planning on doing the second half later this 12 months.
“This exceptional technology got here out of Manchester Polytechnic, which included Brian and Martin Parr and Daniel Meadows,” says the collector and gallerist James Hyman, who based the Centre for British Pictures. “And the three of them have been completely basic, of their alternative ways, within the growth of British pictures over a 50 12 months interval. He is bought a central place in that historical past, and he was additionally a really particular person voice.”