Grayson, in his six episode Channel 4 series Grayson's Art Club, fits that billing perfectly. Perry's belief, and one shared by many, is that art can help us through the crisis and each instalment of the show takes a different theme (portraits, animals, fantasy, view from my window, home, and Britain) and asks both celebrity guests and "the great British public" to get involved by creating artworks under lockdown with the aim of, when it's safe to do so, Grayson curating a show of it in IRL. In an actual art gallery. Remember them?
Each week Grayson speaks a bit about the art of the past that he feels best illustrates the theme of the show. We're shown works by Picasso, Van Gogh, Hockney, Vermeer, Botticelli, Hopper, Henri Rousseau, Bonnard, Eric Ravilious, Rachel Whiteread, and Chantal Joffe alongside images of William Frith's The Derby-Day, Elizabethan miniatures, and Banksy's wheel clamped Boudicca statues on London's Victoria Embankment.
They're respectful and often silly but they're never cruel. Harry Hill makes a ventriloquist's dummy of Whitty and Keith Lemon paints a picture of the Prof (he also, less successfully, dresses up as Pharrell - at least this time he resists the temptation to do it in 'blackface') and Perry includes him in many of his own pieces, including one in which Whitty is reading a copy of Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion. Perry calls his pieces "monuments to domestic imprisonment".
Deller, like Grayson Perry, is as much a communicator, a teacher, as he is an artist and both of them agree, as do I, that when this is all over "we can't carry on as normal". We can't go back to the levels of poverty, wealth inequality, and homelessness we had before Covid. We must change society and make it better and fairer for all. This, Perry observes as so many of us have also, is a once in a lifetime opportunity to fix what's wrong.
She's incredibly irritating but I did come (slightly) round to her eventually and put her rude and surly manner down not to her artistic temperament and self-importance but to the fact she was stressed out. It was the peak of lockdown so I cut her some slack. But it wasn't the interview with Hambling, and or even the rest of the far more amenable celebrities, that made Grayson's Art Club the delight it was. The real joy, the real emotion, came from him gently eking out the stories behind the art that the public were making and the joyful looks on their faces when he informed them they'd been selected for his exhibition.
Vinny Montag and Kim Li's art fridge was a lovely idea, The Singh Twins' Covid spore flecked dragon being fought by a nurse on horseback while Boris Johnson tries to stop her is a powerful piece, and the moving and kind interview, more of a conversation really, with frontline nurse Hannah Grace Deller and the photo of her dog were all genuine highlights that showed the very best of Grayson Perry and the very best of British. A modest and gentle creativity so different to the bellicose exceptionalism that often rallies round the flag.
Mandish and Simran have made a lovely, cute, family portrait. It shows Simran practising kung fu, a grumpy older brother sat on a wicker chair, and the elder Khebbals posing in fancy clothes. There's a portrait in the background of Simran's twin brother Sorian who died when he was just four years old and, wrapped in his mum's arms, Simran talks directly to Grayson and to the country:-
"He died when he was four and also when I was four. Home is where the heart is and my heart is with my family"
As Simran cuddles his mum ever tighter, Mandish takes up the story by telling Grayson how the anniversary of Sorian's death is approaching and quarantine means they may not be able to carry out their yearly ritual of leaving toy dinosaurs on nearby park benches with little signs attached saying "take me home and play with me" so that on an unbearably sad day they can at least put joy into other children's hearts.
Sorian cried, Grayson cried, and I cried. If you watched it and somehow remained unmoved I don't envy you. I pity you for your lack of compassion. Grayson's Art Club wasn't just a show in which Perry could tell us of his love for the fantasy art of Hieronymus Bosch and Henry Darger, it wasn't just a show in which pregnant Laura showed us her fantastical painted belly, and it wasn't just a show in which Grayson Perry could return, time and again, to his Alan Measles statue (all rusty aerials, corroded sheets of brass, and rotten teeth) even though it was all those things.
It was also a lot more than that. Grayson Perry used art, and creativity, as a prism to view not just the extraordinary times we've been, and still are, living through but to explore far more permanent concerns. Those of anxiety, society, family, friendship, and love. He chose not to do it by hectoring us but, instead, by being the change in the world he wanted to see. I can't be the only one who's glad that Grayson Perry's kindness, humility, curiosity, and empathy, even more so than any of the art on his show, continued, and continues, to shine like a beacon and bring light to the darkest of times.
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