Marv Graff is a famed jewelry and fibers designer turned mixed media sculpture artist.

Marv’s artwork expertly merges the fields of avant-garde fashion, textile design, sculpture, and historic preservation in order to reimagine the purpose and aesthetic of old-world objects into contemporary sculpture. His work deals with the power of artistic reappropriation through unexpected materials.

Graff skillfully employs a variety of texture, embellishment, pattern, and decorative details in order to fabricate what he calls “the second skin” of an object, bringing new energy and interpretation to antiques, with a particular interest in French antiquity. His art juxtaposes traditional, old-world objects with contemporary structure and aesthetic, exploring the tension of what the viewer recognizes and what they imagine through the eyes of the artist. Each work conjures multiple meanings and speaks to Graff’s rich interest in cultural nuance and what he calls “the forgotten, swept aside objects” of the past.

Jet, 2016, Available

 

Artist, Marv Graff

 

Graff’s work has been featured in Women’s Wear Daily, Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Elle and New York magazine. In 1979, he won the Pr. de Cache award for Young Designer of the Year. He created a knotted tunic commissioned by Mary McFadden that is part of the permanent collection at The Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. In June 2016, Graff graduated from the Savannah College of Art and Design with an M.F.A. in Fibers.

Oh Deer! 2014, Savannah College of Art and Design Permanent Collection