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New sculptures by Sir Billy Connolly unveiled

The sculptures are based on his previous hand-signed giclee prints.

Lucinda Cameron
Thursday 02 November 2023 11:53 EDT
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Related video: Sir Billy Connolly knighted at Buckingham Palace in 2017

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Sir Billy Connolly has unveiled his latest sculptures, inspired by travel and his love of music.

Based on his previous sold-out hand-signed giclee prints, Direction and Two for the Road have been reimagined in polished stainless steel in the new works.

It comes following the publication of a new volume of Sir Billyā€™s autobiography entitled Rambling Man: My Life on the Road, which recalls his travels over the years, from being a musician on the road to international trips to make TV series.

The Direction sculpture, priced at Ā£6,250, and Two for the Road, priced at Ā£5,500 ā€“ are being sold by Castle Fine Art, which has galleries around the country.

A limited edition of his Two for the Road ā€“ Rambling Man Edition giclee print is also on sale for Ā£1,750, with a striking green colour added to his trademark black-and-white drawings.

The comedian, affectionately known as The Big Yin, said: ā€œTwo for the Road looks like every band I was ever in.

ā€œI was never in a popular band, except The Humblebums, the band I was in with Gerry Rafferty.

ā€œIt reminds me of the recent book Iā€™ve done about being on the road and travelling, and I know how much that has been part of my life.

ā€œThe wee one in the picture is a melodeon player; melodeon players are weird, they know obscure things that nobody cares about.

ā€œMelodeon players will go up to other melodeon players and say: ā€˜Is that a B18?ā€™ and have incredibly dull conversations about melodeons with each other. Theyā€™re boring, but I find them incredibly interesting.

ā€œI love people like that; I love people who go into music shops, not to buy anything, but they just love looking at banjos and fiddles and autoharps, and all things musical that they find interesting, and heā€™s one of them.ā€

The sculptures were first made in clay and were then cast in stainless steel, referencing the time Sir Billy spent working as a welder in Glasgowā€™s shipyards in his youth.

Commenting on Direction, Sir Billy said he does not know what the figures are doing or where they are going, but that they are being led by someone.

He said: ā€œI donā€™t know if itā€™s a woman or a man ā€“ I think itā€™s a woman because it looks like theyā€™re in a dress. Following your mother through a shop when you hate shopping comes to mind.

ā€œBut thatā€™s not the way I work; I just draw them and they could be anything. It could be a kilt or something stuffed up it, so itā€™s up to the viewer to decide.

ā€œI hope if you get one of these pieces, you live with it. I find living with them dead easy and the number of people who own my art now, itā€™s breathtaking and itā€™s made me very happy.ā€

Sir Billy took up drawing while in Canada in 2007 and has since become a keen artist.

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