The green Gras is radiating a little less green and vibrant these days and this is not necessarily attributable to the ageing process and a fading of optical and aural powers. I have climbed onto a plateau and am now looking back on those 25 plus years spent in the valley of labour. I can just make out my former self as a speck on the horizon. Zooming in we see a late bloomer who is negotiating the well-worn path of part-time jobs to fund the writing, photography, drawing and film making. There is energy exerted in between bouts of inertia.

A transformational moment occurs in 2008 with a resolve to become a full-time artist. Patience, practice and process are now married with project work. Making others share in your ideas and securing funding to make these dream come to fruition. Successful projects include eco work for the Cultural Olympiad and a recent V&A community artist residency that allowed residents of North Kensington to connect with the museum on the theme of regeneration and social change. All peaks are followed by troughs in the valley. One such is Birth Control – a site specific installation about the North Kensington Women’s Welfare Centre that failed to secure Wellcome Trust funding. I spent too much time trying to tick boxes and forgot about the creativity.

​I have compiled a selective slide show of all those shades of Gras with drawings and photos that span from 1984-2016. The artful “selfie” has always been an intrinsic part of self-reflection, role-play and a desire to establish points of permanence (or the illusion of closure) in a rapidly changing world. These images show a movement from youthful, solitary immersion in a photographic dark room to the collective joys of drawing with oil pastels. I’m just getting into my stride and being an optimistic soul, look forward to the unknown challenges in the next 25 years.


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