Sculptress


Sculpture of Boris Johnson by Flavia Brilli

 How my love of the Brighton Museum and Toby jugs inspired my sculpture


Born in Brighton, and since a child, I made regular trips to the Brighton and Hove museum which at that time had a beautiful, well-furnished library. For me, the museum became an essential part of my life. For books, for inspiration, for humour, for nostalgia. It summed up everything I knew and loved about Brighton. 

Downstairs there was a beautiful gallery of deco furniture, ceramics, and paintings which could be viewed as well from the upstairs tea rooms. I spent so many days revisiting the gallery gloating at the deco artefacts. 


When I returned many years later after a long sojourn in London, I found the museum had undergone a dramatic overhaul, and the new layout drew me to the ceramics display which was absolutely stunning. So engaged with the wonderful idiosyncratic,  unique designs, I was unaware that I was the last person in the museum. But the kindly security guard let me linger just a little longer, and that was the visit that sewed the seeds for a future project.

Much later, on one of my long thinking walks, when Boris Johnson was Mayor of London, I suddenly saw the perfect subject matter for a ceramic figure. And since I loved the humour of the Toby jug format, I decided to take inspiration from this particularly English genre of ceramic sculpture and produce something that explored this ceramic theme.


My Boris Johnson sculpture intentionally doesn't conform to the Toby jug format of handle and jug, but borrows the humour and fun of Toby jugs and blends it with the character of Boris Johnson. During Boris's time as Mayor of London, he was well known for his love of cycling to work each day, and well known for his humorous antics. So it was a wonderful challenge to combine a figure with a bike, with plenty of humour and fun, but which would also be anchored in time by a unique, historic event: the 2012 Olympics in Britain.
 Brighton and Hove Museum and Art Gallery

Brighton and Hove Museum

The beautiful facade of the Brighton and Hove Museum which I visited so often in my childhood. All my design work is inspired and informed by my enduring love for my home town Brighton. A place forever associated in my mind with all that is fun, stylish, and elegant.



Thank you letters from Boris Johnson




Handwritten thank you letter from Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, to artist Flavia Brilli for 2012 Olympic Games commemorative sculpture

Handwritten thank you letter from Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, sent to my home for 2012 Olympic Games commemorative sculpture


Thank you letter from Boris Johnson, Mayor of London, to artist Flavia Brilli

Official Thank you letter from Mayor's Office, London

1 comment

  1. Gosh! It's him to a tee! Great as Mayor. Not so good as prime minister. But sculpture sure sums up that period when he rode around London. Like it!

    ReplyDelete

Hi, comments are welcome :)