Working in oils and echoing the tableaux of the Old Masters, Mitch Griffiths produces modern paintings that address issues of identity and inclusion, obsolescence and conflict. A virtuoso painter, he employs a hyper-realist technique, working the canvas through the traditional chiaroscuro and utilising a single light source to both shape and highlight his figures on the canvas. ‘Many people say my paintings look photo-realist’, he says, ‘but it’s not what I’m trying to achieve. I’m trying to make the viewer enter MY reality.’
Touching on themes such as nationhood, iconography, ‘cult beauty’ and celebrity culture, Griffiths is holding up a mirror to society. By approaching these subjects in a bold and unyielding manner, he creates potentially uncomfortable, though compulsive viewing scenarios. Maintaining an air of sensitivity which provides a bittersweet edge, his work remains both peculiarly beautiful and profoundly disturbing. Through these contrived sets, Griffiths allows the viewer to both identify with, and question the stories that play out across the canvas.
As a new body of work, Iconostasis unfolds the blatant distinction between an individual’s desired perception of themselves and how they are actually seen. Griffiths plays with the notion that our saints have now evolved – no longer heavenly, but worshipped for their unending trials and self-promotion through the media. Griffiths’ figures exist in a state of purgatory – neither holy nor common, famed nor unknown – hanging on the edge of a nirvana which is based no longer on divinity, but instead on a false sense of ecstasy ensued by the rituals and expected behaviours of contemporary society.
A triptych titled Absolution presents a scene of horrific torture. A man is experiencing the controversial technique of waterboarding, however on close examination, the torture device is a bottle of champagne; the character drowning in his own excess and perceived notions of luxury.
Other works involve fallen angels, saints and criminals, disguised as ordinary people and emotional outcasts – or are they meant to be understood the other way around?
As writer Philip Wright discusses in his essay ‘No Portrait Can Be Silent,’ “Such is the language of allegory, it may produce truths that are more convincingly portrayed through the medium of images than by words...Griffiths’ portraits and figure groups may not speak to us in words but they have the power to suggest thoughts and raise doubts, pose questions and voice concerns; ultimately they question the moral codes by which we live our lives.”
The most important thing to take away from Griffiths’ paintings is that there is no correct interpretation. The paintings are simply meant to speak through reaction, to challenge the viewer to relate and conclude for themselves, breaking down the barrier which separates them from the artist, himself.
Mitch Griffiths , British, b. 1971. Mitch’s detailed, figurative paintings are bluntly honest with a skill and complexity common in paintings of the Old Masters. His large size canvases contain a narrative and energy that express his anxieties about modern life in a symbolic and illustrative way. Astonishingly self-taught, Mitch’s portraits are extremely captivating and contemporary.