Details
Artist
Styles
Cast in solid sterling silver with a silver chain, with an oxidised finish. Signed and numbered on the insert card. // A small cast sterling-silver cat, oxidised to soft grey, stands four-square in profile, body and limbs decorated all over with rounded studs, beads and floral nicks; the heavy silver chain coils beside. Perry made the pendant during the pandemic, naming it for the UK Chief Medical Officer's cat — small private icon of public life under lockdown. Cast in solid sterling silver with chain, signed and numbered on the insert card. A wearable Grayson Perry — among the most intimate and historically charged objects to acquire from his celebrated multiples.
Chris Whitty's Cat (Pendant), 2021
form
Medium
Size
4.2 x 2 cm
- Inches
- Centimeters
Edition
Price
- USD
- EUR
- GBP
Details
Artist
Styles
Cast in solid sterling silver with a silver chain, with an oxidised finish. Signed and numbered on the insert card. // A small cast sterling-silver cat, oxidised to soft grey, stands four-square in profile, body and limbs decorated all over with rounded studs, beads and floral nicks; the heavy silver chain coils beside. Perry made the pendant during the pandemic, naming it for the UK Chief Medical Officer's cat — small private icon of public life under lockdown. Cast in solid sterling silver with chain, signed and numbered on the insert card. A wearable Grayson Perry — among the most intimate and historically charged objects to acquire from his celebrated multiples.
- Recently Added
- Price (low-high )
- Price (high-low )
- Year (low-high )
- Year (high-low )
Grayson Perry
Totally Unique Thing Ceramic Frame, 2025
Limited Edition Print
Mixed Media
GBP 5,000 - 6,500
Grayson Perry
England As Seen During Lockdown From Islington, 2021
Limited Edition Print
Pigment Print
GBP 23,500
What is Kitsch?
Kitsch is a term used to describe cheap, commercial, sentimental, or vulgar art and objects commonly associated with popular culture. The word is borrowed from German, where it originally means trash. Since the 1920s, kitsch has been used to denote the opposite of high art, often implying that the work lacks sophistication or artistic merit.
