| "Glow": my photo & digital. |
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Celebrating Cats in Art
Throughout the Centuries
| Xuan Loc Xuan, “Nasturtium Cat” (2023), digital painting, 9 7/8 × 11 3/8 inches. |
Adolph E. Weidhaas, “Brünnhilde” (1936), gelatin silver print, 4 ¾ × 3 ½ inches. It was during the 18th and 19th centuries in Europe that cats became increasingly recognized as worthy pets, beyond their role as mousers. Breweries and distilleries often still “employ” a cat or two to keep the rodents out of the grain. From supernatural kaibyō in Japanese folklore to felines’ divine status in ancient Egypt, the animals have had an indelible influence on mythology, history, and our daily lives for a very long time. Forthcoming from Phaidon, the book Cat celebrates, well, exactly what you’d expect. From contemporary sculpture and illustrations to early photography and internet memes, the volume runs the gamut of feline personalities and depictions in art throughout the millennia. Yet no matter how diverse the portrayals or how long ago they were created, the creatures’ expressiveness—even ridiculousness—is universally relatable. Cat surveys an immense range of mediums and eras, from medieval illuminated manuscripts to modern street art. Colossal readers may be familiar with artists like Xuan Loc Xuan, Lee Sangsoo, and Utagawa Hiroshige, among many others, whose multimedia explorations of feline nature fill the playful tome. Bill Traylor, Untitled (Midnight Blue Cat) (c. 1939–42), poster paint on found cardboard, |
| Utagawa Hiroshige II, “A White Cat Playing with a String” (1863), woodcut, 8 3/8 × 10 1/2 inches |
| Sally J. Han, “Nap” (2022), acrylic paint on paper mounted on wood panel, 24 × 30 inches |
| Nathaniel Currier, “The Favorite Cat” (1838–48), hand-colored lithograph. |
| Jodie Niss, Untitled (#2) (2022), oil on wood panel, 16 × 12 inches. |
| Andy Holden, “Cat-tharsis” (2022), 90 cat figurines and HD video with music by The Grubby Mitts, 17 minutes. |
| Sunset from the back yard. 5 PM |




