GEORGE MORL
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Precious Boys#3
2018
Precious Boys#3
Work:
Precious Boys#3
Date: 2018
Medium: Plaster, exterior paint, alum salt, sugar
Dimensions: Variable
Date: 2018
Medium: Plaster, exterior paint, alum salt, sugar
Dimensions: Variable
︎ Summary
‘Precious Boys 3’ (2018), is another work from this same series of sculptures that examines the effects of post-industrial and coastal landscapes on young men, particularly in relation to gender roles, isolation, and adolescence. The work pays homage to the romanticised portrayals of youth found in Francisco de Goya’s small paintings of boys picking fruit and blowing up sheep bladders. Echoing these organic, playful forms, the sculptures are made from plaster casts of medical consumables. In contrast to Goya’s depiction of innocence and curiosity, the work reflects contemporary adolescent experiences shaped by body-image anxiety, sexuality, emotional vulnerability, and societal pressure—forces that can isolate individuals from wider communities.
This narrative is also informed by William Blake’s Songs of Innocence and Experience, particularly the poems “Cradle Song,” “Infant Sorrow,” and “The Little Boy Lost,” which explore themes of vulnerability, loss, and the transition from childhood to adulthood.
Growing up in rural South Essex—among wheat and rape seed fields, abandoned wartime pillboxes, and brutalist New Town architecture—Morl explores how post-industrial society has reshaped labour, community, and identity. Similar to post-industrial cities in the North East such as Tyne and Wear, or in the South East like Basildon, which developed as part of 1950s social housing reform to address wartime displacement, the changing economy of the 1980s disrupted traditional male roles. The result has been the rise of an ornamental culture of masculinity, where beauty services, gyms, barbers, and cosmetic procedures for men are now common.
This shift has also driven an increase in steroid use, often purchased online and circulated through social media. Using search-trend data, Morl tracked the frequency of terms such as “protein” and “steroid” and found higher prevalence in coastal towns, post-industrial towns, and London—especially among younger men. Under the pressure to achieve idealised bodies, many men conceal steroid use and digitally edit their torsos, intensifying anxiety and sometimes leading to tragic outcomes, including suicide.
Precious Boys presents a personal, autistic imagined reflectioin of this effect. The installation consists of gloss-coated plaster sculptures resting on a mass of pigmented salt and sugars. The solutions used in the process, including alum salts, reference both Victorian children’s medicines and modern HIV treatments. The overall effect is simultaneously visually alluring and unsettling, creating a contemporary vigil or nursery rhyme that tells the story of young men seeking affection while living with emotional pain and mental illness.
Displayed en masse, they mimic body parts, and echo death, and are decorated with industrial materials, referencing the aesthetics and histories of post-industrial towns, places where suicide rates of young men are highest.
‘I identified with this emotional landscape, feeling others struggle to find love and affection within a post-industrial environment. For many queer men, fear of loneliness and anxiety about appearance can become overwhelming, and these pressures can culminate in suicide. Precious Boys functions as a dark, visual nursery rhyme, depicting men’s exposed abdomens laid out on the ground. The work’s soundscape—overlapping organ tones with cries and moans—echoes the war-torn fields
If war was the defining image of the early 1900s, the hidden suffering of today is found in the quiet, constant circulation of digital images of torsos and muscles. In this landscape, the desire to be loved has become inseparable from the need to feel validated’.
︎ Further Reading
Platform Artist Focus, Contemporary Visual Art Network, 30 April 2019
Platform Award Alumni Stories: George Morl, CVAN, 13 May 2019
George Morl, Precious Boys, Southend Museum Blog, 20 July 2018
Morl George, George Morl’s Precious Boys at Southend Museum, CVAN South East, 10 July 2018
︎ Exhibitions
Precious Boys, Southend Museums, 14 July - 08 September 2018
UCA Degree Show, Herbert Read Gallery, June 2016
︎ Assosiated Awards
Darren Henley Scholarship, 2016
Platform Award, 2016, Nominated
UCA Vice Chancellor Award, 2016