Six tapestries created by artist Grayson Perry have
been gifted to the Arts Council Collection and the British Council.
The tapestries,
titled The Vanity of Small Differences, were made earlier this year alongside
Perry's Channel 4 series, All in the Best Possible Taste.
Inspired by
William Hogath's A Rake's Progress, they each measure 2m x 4m.
The works will
begin a national and international exhibitions tour, starting in Sunderland in
June.
The tapestries
tell the story of class mobility and the influence British social classes have
on aesthetic taste, charting the "class journey" made by the
protagonist in Perry's series, Tim Rakewell.
They include
many of the characters and incidents Perry encountered while travelling through
Sunderland, Tunbridge Wells and The Cotswolds for the show - which he literally
weaved into the work.
'Marvellous gift'
"I am
hugely pleased and proud that The Vanity of Small Differences will be shared by
the Arts Council and British Council Collections because this means the work
will be able to travel all around the country and the world," Perry said.
"Of all
the pieces I have made, this was the one I conceived from the outset as a
public artwork.
"I hope
that wherever it goes, it not only delights the eye but also sparks debate
about class, taste and British society."
With support
from the Art Fund, the touring exhibition will begin at the Sunderland Museum
and Winter Garden - the town where the first two tapestries, The Adoration of
the Cage Fighters and The Agony in the Car Park, are set.
It will then
continue to Manchester, Birmingham, Liverpool and Leeds.
"Grayson's
state-of-the-nation tapestries are caustic, funny and affectionate. They are a
marvellous gift to our two Collections, and to our worldwide audiences,"
Andrea Rose, from the British Council, said.
Source: BBC
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