Tuesday 4 December 2012

life would suck without David Shrigley

David Shrigley
David Shrigley
Born17 September 1968 (age 44)
MacclesfieldEngland
NationalityBritish
FieldDrawing, Photography, Painting, Sculpture, Animation, Music
TrainingLeicester Polytechnic
Glasgow School of Art
Influenced byJean Tinguely[1]
Websitewww.davidshrigley.com

Life and career




Shrigley was born in Macclesfield on 17 September 1968,[2] the younger of two children born to Rita (née Bowring) and Joseph Shrigley.[citation needed] He moved with his parents and sister to Oadby, Leicestershire, when he was two years old.[3][1] He did the Art and Design Foundation course at the Leicester Polytechnic in 1987,[4][5] and then studied Environmental Art[1] at the Glasgow School of Art from 1988 to 1991.[2]

Although he works in various media, he is best known for his mordantly humorous cartoons released in softcover books or postcard packs.
Like the poet Ivor Cutler, Shrigley finds humour in flat depictions of the inconsequential, the unavailing and the bizarre – although he is far fonder of violent or otherwise disquieting subject matter. Shrigley's work has two of the characteristics often encountered in outsider art – an odd viewpoint, and (in some of his work) a deliberately limited technique. His freehand line is often weak, which jars with his frequent use of a ruler; his forms are often very crude; and annotations in his drawings are poorly executed and frequently contain crossings-out (In authentic outsider art, the artist has no choice but to produce work in his or her own way, even if that work is unconventional in content and inept in execution. In contrast, it is likely that Shrigley has chosen his style and range of subject matter for comic effect).
As well as authoring several books, he directed the video for Blur's "Good Song" and also for Bonnie 'Prince' Billy's "Agnes, Queen of Sorrow". In 2005 designed a London Underground leaflet cover. Since 2005, he has contributed a cartoon for The Guardian's Weekend magazine every Saturday. Other projects have included the album Worried Noodles (Tom Lab, 2007) where musicians interpret his writings as lyrics, including collaborations by David Byrne, Hot Chip, and Franz Ferdinand.
Shrigley co-directed an animate!-commissioned film with director Chris Shepherd called Who I Am And What I Want, based on Shrigley's book of the same title.[6] Kevin Eldon voiced its main character, Pete.[6] He also produced a series of drawings and T-shirt designs for the 2006 Triptych festival, a Scottish music festival lasting for three to four days in three cities. He has also designed twelve different covers for Deerhoof's 2007 record, Friend Opportunity.[7]Shrigley is a lifelong supporter of Nottingham Forest FC.[citation needed]
Shrigley is represented by Stephen Friedman Gallery, London.[8] He is represented in Paris by the Yvon Lambert Gallery.[9]Jason Mraz took the name of his album We Sing. We Dance. We Steal Things. from a work by Shrigley


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