Portsmouth News

‘The art leads the way’

- BY CHRIS BROOM

Peering through the gloom with his torch, My Dog Sighs notices a hole in the wall. Pulling away at the rotten plaster, he scrabbles through to find a staircase hidden behind the wall – blocked off decades earlier.

Inching onwards and upwards he turns the corner at the top of the stairs and is faced with the cavernous ballroom. Home to 300-odd pigeons, the floor strewn with broken glass and the whole space reeking of faded grandeur, it was then that the Portsmouth street artist knew he had found the perfect space to realise his plans.

Now, after 18 months of painstakin­g work, today he reveals the fruits of his labours to the public for the first time with the exhibition Inside: We Shelter Here Sometimes.

Housed inside the former Grosvenor Casino building on Osborne Road in Southsea, The News was invited to have a sneak preview of the show, and the scope and scale of the project is incredible.

After months of hints being left around the city, from paste-ups in a language created just for this show, to cryptic small ads in the pages of The News, it all leads here. An immersive work over two floors, it goes far beyond the eye murals, or the Everyman figures and tin-can people he is already known and loved for.

This is like stepping inside the artist’s mind – combining paintings, sculpture, sound and light on a grand scale. There is artwork tucked in alcoves, around corners, in hidden rooms, on every surface.

My Dog Sighs explains the idea behind the show: ‘I'd been looking for a space, and I'd been wanting to move from painting murals on the street and I knew I wanted to do it in my home town. And then we stumbled across this place.’

Before being a casino, it was Kimbells nightclub and as a music venue it played host to stars such as Led Zeppelin and The Yardbirds. The building even had a stint as a Playboy Club. But by the time My Dog Sighs came across it, the upstairs had been unused for decades – blocked off behind the sealed up doorway.

‘As soon as I walked into this space, it was that dawning realisatio­n that this was way more, way better than I had ever imagined it to be as a venue, and that my bar had to be raised in order to do the building service.

‘It's a once in a lifetime opportunit­y to get a building like this – so close to home, in my home town, with a building owner that's willing to let me come and try out my ideas.’

The building is owned by Farid Yeganeh, who also owns the neighbouri­ng Queens Hotel.

‘The first time I went inside I had no idea what the building was going to be like. ‘I entered through what was the old casino first of all

It's a once in a lifetime opportunit­y

and was really excited by that. Then I found this hole in the wall – like a kid you just want to explore – if there's a hole you want to climb through!

‘So I literally climbed through the wall and found this staircase. Eventually I got to the top and looked into that ballroom and it was just the most incredibly breath-taking moment. I knew at that moment that this was the opportunit­y of a lifetime, that this was going to be the show of my career.’

For the next five months he worked in the gloom with battery-powered inspection lamps, until they got mains power hooked up again.

One key theme he had was, that ‘I loved the idea that the art leads the way, not the artist – this puts the art back on centre stage.’

And so it is that his creations, the Quiet Little Voices are the driving force behind the exhibition.

‘I remember sitting on a chair I'd found, in the middle of the ballroom surrounded by pigeons and dust and rubbish and thinking: what lives in this space? What occupies this space? How do I as an artist use this space to the best advantage?

‘And then it was the realisatio­n that although I might be more known for the eyes or the cans, or the Everyman, these Quiet Little Voices that have been ticking away in the background quietly. It was that realisatio­n that THEY can be the occupiers, they can be My Dog Sighs.

‘They can take over this space and it can be this whole wonderful story of how they have found this space, made a community there, they work together in unison.

‘They try – they might not succeed at everything and they can't just order things from Amazon – they've got to raid skips and build things from the trash they find around them.

‘They're triers and they're going to do their best to make that community work.

‘I suppose that echoes what we're like as humans, maybe we don't pull things out of a skip to live by, but we have to try to be the best people we can be, and it was about trying to echo that in the show.’

When not working on the actual art itself, he’s been busy with everything else from learning how to eradicate fleas, to removing several inches of pigeon poo, and working with health and safety.

‘It’s been a real rollercoas­ter of a journey – highs and lows, getting funding, having funding pulled, thinking it would never happen, Covid coming along and maybe never being able to open it up to the public.’

He also admits to moments of doubt where he felt he’d bitten off more than he could chew.

‘Oh yeah – absolutely, massively! I’ve been ready to pull the plug a few times! It's been really really tough, but we have to adapt to the situation.

‘Now, we are at the stage where we can let people in and I'm so excited to see the expression­s on people's faces, unsure what's going on, and they turn that corner and they look into that room and step into my magical world.

‘It's been my world for 18 months. I've lived and breathed this every day for 18 months and I just can't wait to show people.’

With the show only running for a fortnight, what happens next?

‘Lots of people are asking, are you going to extend the show? Are you going to try and make it last a little bit longer? And my wife said: “I've just booked us a holiday.”

‘When we get back from that I can deal with the fallout from the show and see what the future holds, because I've got no idea at the moment!’

The show runs until Sunday, August 1. Adults £10, concession­s £5, under18s free. Go to mydogsighs. co.uk.

I've lived and breathed this for 18 months

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 ?? All pictures by Mike Cooter. ?? Scene from Inside: We Shelter Here Sometimes by My Dog Sighs.
All pictures by Mike Cooter. Scene from Inside: We Shelter Here Sometimes by My Dog Sighs.
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 ??  ?? Top: My Dog Sighs in the now widened doorway he had to clamber through to find the upstairs ballroom.
Top: My Dog Sighs in the now widened doorway he had to clamber through to find the upstairs ballroom.

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