In the late 1960s, while attending the Slade School of Fine Art, Grylls gave guided tours of Cambridge to overseas visitors, and after graduating, his first teaching position was at the
University of Reading, followed by
Homerton College, Cambridge where he taught sculpture.
Pun-sculptures At
Goldsmiths, University of London in 1968, Grylls produced an exhibition of his first photographically based pun-sculptures, each made from cardboard and called collectively '
Ludwig Wittgenstein's Palace of Pun.' He took this with him to the Slade School of Fine Art and continued to make more pun-sculptures. His work was noticed at his final show at the Slade in 1970 by
Jasia Reichardt, art critic and assistant director of the ICA. His first London exhibition was held at the ICA in October 1970 as one room in an exhibition entitled 'Ten Sitting Rooms.' Grylls' pun-sculpture work was also shown at an alternative exhibition space called The Gallery. The Gallery was opened in Lisson St, London in 1972 by fellow Slade graduate Nicholas Wegner. Wegner invited Grylls to show at The Gallery. The work Grylls exhibited in 1973 entitled 'An Indo-Chinese Punsculpture' was a large photo-mural commenting on the signing of the so-called
Paris Peace Treaty. Wegner and Grylls then collaborated in an artistic partnership, inspired in part by
Andy Warhol, from 1973 to 1975. Wegner closed The Gallery in 1978.
Photography From 1977, Grylls' style developed into works largely inspired by international news and political events. He used photographic montage techniques to create a collection of images pinned together to produce one large image. Grylls said that his overtly political art tried, in the case of The Wailing (Western) Wall, Jerusalem, to "examine a cultural and religious icon that has had a far-reaching influence on political events today." (later known as the
University of Wolverhampton). In 1996, he became director of the
Kent Institute of Art & Design. In 2003, Grylls proposed creating a new university of more than 6,000 students studying art, design, and architecture by merging the Kent Institute with the Surrey Institute of Art & Design to prevent these free-standing art colleges becoming absorbed into their local universities. The merged institution was called the University College for the Creative Arts at Canterbury, Epsom, Farnham, Maidstone & Rochester (since 2009 the
University for the Creative Arts). Grylls as founding Chief Executive of the merged institution resigned soon afterwards, announcing that he intended to return full-time to his own work. In 2018, Bitter Lemon Press published Grylls' autobiographical book,
Have You Come Far? A Life in Interviews.
2020s Just America, exhibited at the Batsford Gallery, London from April 3–28, 2024, brought together works on the subject of the United States made by Grylls between 1973 and 2024. It included
Fentanyl Drive (2024), a 20-foot panoramic photo collage on drug addiction in
Philadelphia.
Strongmen, exhibited at the Batsford Gallery, London from June 13–22, 2025, brought together works on the subject of authoritarian rule made by Grylls from 1973 to 2025. It included
Second Coming (2025), a 26-foot panoramic photo collage depicting the
penultimate Donald Trump rally at
Warren, Michigan before the
2024 United States presidential election. Throughout the COVID-19 lockdowns, Grylls produced a daily video series of short online performances via social media. The videos included piano playing, humour, and Grylls' personal anecdotes. The broadcasts became known as Vaughan's Socks, a reference to the brightly coloured socks that he wore during the performances. == Publications ==