Skip to main content
A vibrant and detailed tapestry depicting a chaotic domestic scene. In the foreground, a young woman appears to be fleeing while holding a book, with a rainbow arching over her. Various figures are shown engaged in different activities, including a group dining at a table, a man driving a red Range Rover, and others seemingly absorbed in modern gadgets. The tapestry is rich in colors and patterns, with elements like a heart, sun rays, and stormy clouds adding to the dynamic atmosphere.
View all events for category: Art & exhibitions

Grayson Perry, The Vanity of Small Differences

Until 8 December 2024
Pitzhanger Manor & Gallery, Ealing Green, London

Grayson Perry’s The Vanity of Small Differences tells the story of class mobility and the influence social class has on our aesthetic taste. Inspired by William Hogarth’s A Rake’s Progress, the six tapestries chart the ‘class journey’ made by young Tim Rakewell and include many of the characters, incidents and objects Grayson Perry encountered on his journeys and experiences throughout Sunderland, Tunbridge Wells and The Cotswolds for the television series ‘All in the Best Possible Taste with Grayson Perry‘, which first aired on Channel 4 in June 2012.

In the series Perry goes on ‘a safari amongst the taste tribes of Britain’, to gather inspiration for his artwork, literally weaving the characters he meets into a narrative, with an attention to the minutiae of contemporary taste every bit as acute as that in Hogarth’s 18th century paintings.

Grayson Perry is a great chronicler of contemporary life, drawing us in with wit, affecting sentiment and nostalgia as well as, at times, fear and anger. In his work, Perry tackles subjects that are universally human: identity, gender, social status, sexuality, religion. Autobiographical references – to the artist’s childhood, his family and his transvestism – can be read in tandem with questions about décor and decorum, class and taste, and the status of the artist versus that of the artisan.

Arts Council Collection, Southbank Centre London and British Council. Gift of the artist and Victoria Miro Gallery with the support of Channel 4 Television, the Art Fund and Sfumato Foundation with additional support from AlixPartners.