Vaughan Murray Griffin (11 Nov 1903 – 29 January 1992) was an Australian print maker and painter.
Life and work
Commonly known as Murray Griffin, he was born in the Melbourne suburb of Malvern to Vaughan and Ethel Griffin. He spent most of his life living in the Eaglemont and Heidelberg area in Melbourne although he also travelled around country Victoria to paint and draw. He produced an extensive body of landscape paintings as well as portraits, but he is best known for his printmaking, where he was heavily influenced by Japanese woodcuts. A number of these prints are on the National Gallery of Australia database.
Griffin was appointed an official war artist in 1941 to work with the 8th Australian Division in Malaya. During his three months' service there he completed pictures which were prepared for transport to Australia, but which did not leave the country, and are lost.[2] He served in that theatre of war from November 1941until he was captured by the Japanese in February 1942 after the fall of Singapore and incarcerated for three and a half years as a POW in Changi Prison, in conditions slightly less harsh than many other Japanese camps. During his imprisonment he made a series of drawings recording his experiences and he exhibited them on his return. The Australian War Memorial holds an extensive collection of this work, but in the exhibition Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture by Australian Official War Artists 1943-44 a note explained that his self-portrait was "the only work of Murray Griffin that can be shown."[3]
From 1946 to 1953 he was a teacher of drawing at the National Gallery of Victoria Art School and then was Senior Lecturer in Art at RMIT from 1954 to 1968. He became known for his colour prints of birds and animals.
Griffin was influenced by Anthroposophy and the teachings of Rudolf Steiner. This passion resulted in a body of oil paintings and linocuts known as the Journey Series. This collection is currently held by La Trobe University.