Griffiths chose to work on a square format for the 1989 exhibition and enjoyed the challenge of miniaturising her marks and gestures to fit the tiny
80 x 80 mm square. That format has become a personal standard for the small prints ever since in Griffiths’ practice.
The 1989 exhibition in Bristol was not the first of these mini print internationals. A few had been established during the preceding decade: Lodz, Poland 1979, Cadeques, Spain 1981 and Malbork, Poland even earlier in 1963 (though strictly speaking an exhibition of contemporary ex libris plates it was a forerunner of the mini print exhibition and continues tri-annually to this day).
Since then, many more open-submission mini-print exhibitions have been established throughout the world. Most of them are juried and work submitted has to be selected by the jury to go forward to the exhibition. They provide a relatively informal and easy platform on which artists of numerous nationalities can send in and show current work and communicate with their peers.
Griffiths says of the mini prints, “Because they are so small, the composition and relationships of colour and form need to be clear and well thought through in these little prints. They are relatively quick to work on and encourage a more experimental and playful approach. They can be seen like working in a sketchbook, ideas can be tried out, variations experimented with and concepts developed over a connected series of prints. Like sketchbook work, they can inform and influence other projects such as larger scale prints or paintings. They become a testing ground for visual language and a personal iconography.”
Since 1989 Griffiths has returned to the small format frequently and most years have seen production of new images and editions of the miniatures. Consequently, Griffiths has had work included in numerous mini print exhibitions throughout the world.
Griffiths has also shown larger scale prints in numerous international biennales and triennales since the 1970’s as well as a continuous history of solo, mixed and group exhibitions featuring drawings, paintings and prints. She is a member of the Printmakers Council and is Vice President of the Royal Society of Painter Printmakers.
Collections
South East Arts (Arts Council of England)
Selskapet Kunst Pa Arbeidsplassen, Norway
The University of Kent
Wiltshire Education Authority
London Borough of Tower Hamlets
Varna Print Biennale, Bulgaria
Victoria and Albert Museum
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford
Southampton NHS Trust
St George’s NHS Trust, London
Falmouth Art Gallery, Cornwall
The University of York
Scarborough Art Gallery