Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (2024)

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Sir Grayson Perry RA (b. 1960) Profile Works by Sir Grayson Perry in the RA Collection 2 results Works associated with Sir Grayson Perry in the RA Collection 1 results Summer Exhibition 2018 My studio life Welcome to the studio “Welcome to my brand new Islington studio! We used to walk past here 20 years ago and think, ‘Wow, this would make a wonderful studio’. And now I’ve got it.” © Eamonn McCabe A building with history “The building was originally used as a watch factory, and you can still see signs of the belt-driven machinery. The next company here made decorative plaster moulding for theatres, and it was finally a small metal workshop. After that, it was used as a film set. With pale green, flaking paint, it was perfect for period drama murder scenes…” © Eamonn McCabe Cashmere socks “I do feel slightly embarrassed here. It feels like one of those YBA studios: they always have perfect white industrial studios. I’m not complaining though. Moving here has been the biggest change in my life – my work rate has gone up hugely. In Walthamstow I had to go home by four as it was simply too cold. Even here though, I swear by cashmere socks from November all the way through to about April.” © Eamonn McCabe A sad day for Walthamstow “We had to hire cranes and knock down the front door to get these kilns out of my last studio. A man was walking past pushing a buggy and asked what was going on. So I told him I was moving to a new studio. ‘Oh, it’s a sad day for Walthamstow,’ he said. Artists are the shock troops of gentrification, and Walthamstow is well on the way. ‘My work here is done,’ I told him!” © Eamonn McCabe Alan Measles, kiln god “The woman on top of the red kiln is my kiln goddess. Alan Measles got co-opted to look after the second one.” © Eamonn McCabe "Everything is contingent" “For the tapestries, I start with a full-scale drawing and then use this to design them. I work with a production company called Factum Arte, who sent their Photoshop expert here for two days to give me a crash course. What’s brilliant about it is that everything is contingent. Unlike real things, you can always go back to the beginning and start again.” © Eamonn McCabe My Bible “This is Kate Fox’s Watching the English. I love this book, it’s my Bible. Every time I meet a foreigner thinking of moving here I tell them to read it.” © Eamonn McCabe The Essex House “I’m always referring to lots of different sources – my books are primary in my work. The green tile in front of these ones is a sketch for the Essex House that I’m doing with FAT and Living Architecture. They’re going to be giant!” © Eamonn McCabe Producing repeat images “These terracotta stamps on the second shelf down are used for logos and other repeat images on my pottery. One of the first I made was a stamp of a hell’s angel. I’ve got thousands of them now.” © Eamonn McCabe Up close “I use the magnifying glass to carve them.” © Eamonn McCabe Fragments “That’s one of my Tate Modern reliquaries hanging from the beams – it’s a piece of broken pot. You can buy it from their gift shop if you like.” © Eamonn McCabe This old thing? “That cushion is ancient and full of pottery dust. There’s something of the little old lady in her conservatory about it.” © Eamonn McCabe "Bikes have always been part of my identity." “I’ve never owned a car. Bikes have always been part of my identity. Trannies do tend to overcompensate by doing very macho stuff. I’m getting to an age now where I’m thinking of buying a car – probably a red sports car, something exotic and embarrassing. ” © Eamonn McCabe "Like the skin of my younger body" “These leathers are the first thing I ever had specially made, when I was 29. I look at them now like the skin of my younger body. I could probably squeeze into them now, like some kind of middle-aged sausage.” © Eamonn McCabe Never knowingly understated “I bought this from Rachel Choi’s student fashion show. It weighs a tonne: clearly, an awful lot of artificial fibres have gone into it! It might be the most bonkers thing I own.” © Eamonn McCabe Gallery Grayson Perry RA, Artist's Robe, 2004. Embroidered silk brocade, leather, printed linen and ceramic buttons. 179 x 70 cm. Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro, London© Grayson Perry. Grayson Perry RA, The Rosetta Vase, 2011. Glazed ceramic. Height 78.5 cm, diameter 40.7 cm. British Museum Collection. Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro, London© Grayson Perry. Grayson Perry RA, World Leaders Attend the Marriage of Alan Measles and Claire Perry, 2009. 52 cm x 32 cm. Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro, London© Grayson Perry. Grayson Perry RA, World Leaders Attend the Marriage of Alan Measles and Claire Perry, 2009. Glazed ceramic. 52 cm x 32 cm. Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro, London© Grayson Perry. Grayson Perry RA, Expulsion from Number 8 Eden Close, 2012. Wool, cotton, acrylic, polyester and silk tapestry. 200 x 400 cm. Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro, London© Grayson Perry. Grayson Perry RA, Map of Truths and Beliefs, 2011. Wool and cotton tapestry woven by Flanders Tapestries from files prepared at Factum Arte. 290 x 690 cm. Courtesy the Artist and Paragon Press, London© Grayson Perry. Selected CV Art Sales at the RA The Island Of Bad Art Related articles Associated books 2 results Schedule exhibition FAQs

Grayson Perry RA

Photo: Eamonn McCabe

  • Sir Grayson Perry RA (b. 1960)

  • Artworks
  • Summer Exhibition 2018
  • My studio life
  • Gallery
  • CV
  • Art Sales
  • Read more
  • Books

Become a Friend

Perry studied at Braintree College of Further Education from 1978 to 1979 and graduated from Portsmouth Polytechnic in 1982. He was awarded the Turner Prize in 2003. Perry was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2013 Queen’s Birthday Honours for services to contemporary art. In 2023 he was awarded a Knighthood (Knight Bachelor) for services to the Arts in the King’s New Year Honours.

He works in a variety of mediums but is best known as a ceramicist. There is a dissonance between the conventional forms of his vessels and the depictions that adorn them. He uses imagery and text to chronicle social concerns, his own formative experiences and to tell the story of his alter ego, Claire. The tone of his narratives is psychologically complex and often caustic. Although he uses traditional methods to make his pots, he employs a range of techniques, such as embossing and photographic transfers, to create intricate, animated surfaces.

Profile

Royal Academician

Printmaker

Born: 1960 in Chelmsford, England, United Kingdom

Nationality: British

Elected RA: 15 March 2011

Gender: Male

Preferred media: Ceramics

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Works by Sir Grayson Perry in the RA Collection

2 results

  • Sir Grayson Perry RA Red Alan, 2011 Ceramic with metal chain
  • Sir Grayson Perry RA A Map of Days, 2013 Etching

Works associated with Sir Grayson Perry in the RA Collection

1 results

  • Grayson Perry R.A. Giclee print. camera: nikon d300.
    • Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (4)


      Summer Exhibition 2018

      In our 250th year, Grayson Perry RA took the helm to coordinate the world’s longest running and largest open-submission show: the Summer Exhibition.

      Famous as the world’s largest open submission show, the Summer Exhibition delivers a panorama of art in all mediums, a remarkable mixture of emerging artists and household names, and more.

      Find out more

  • My studio life

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (5)

    Welcome to the studio

    “Welcome to my brand new Islington studio! We used to walk past here 20 years ago and think, ‘Wow, this would make a wonderful studio’. And now I’ve got it.”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (6)

    A building with history

    “The building was originally used as a watch factory, and you can still see signs of the belt-driven machinery. The next company here made decorative plaster moulding for theatres, and it was finally a small metal workshop. After that, it was used as a film set. With pale green, flaking paint, it was perfect for period drama murder scenes…”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (7)

    Cashmere socks

    “I do feel slightly embarrassed here. It feels like one of those YBA studios: they always have perfect white industrial studios. I’m not complaining though. Moving here has been the biggest change in my life – my work rate has gone up hugely. In Walthamstow I had to go home by four as it was simply too cold. Even here though, I swear by cashmere socks from November all the way through to about April.”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (8)

    A sad day for Walthamstow

    “We had to hire cranes and knock down the front door to get these kilns out of my last studio. A man was walking past pushing a buggy and asked what was going on. So I told him I was moving to a new studio. ‘Oh, it’s a sad day for Walthamstow,’ he said. Artists are the shock troops of gentrification, and Walthamstow is well on the way. ‘My work here is done,’ I told him!”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (9)

    Alan Measles, kiln god

    “The woman on top of the red kiln is my kiln goddess. Alan Measles got co-opted to look after the second one.”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (10)

    "Everything is contingent"

    “For the tapestries, I start with a full-scale drawing and then use this to design them. I work with a production company called Factum Arte, who sent their Photoshop expert here for two days to give me a crash course. What’s brilliant about it is that everything is contingent. Unlike real things, you can always go back to the beginning and start again.”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (11)

    My Bible

    “This is Kate Fox’s Watching the English. I love this book, it’s my Bible. Every time I meet a foreigner thinking of moving here I tell them to read it.”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (12)

    The Essex House

    “I’m always referring to lots of different sources – my books are primary in my work. The green tile in front of these ones is a sketch for the Essex House that I’m doing with FAT and Living Architecture. They’re going to be giant!”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (13)

    Producing repeat images

    “These terracotta stamps on the second shelf down are used for logos and other repeat images on my pottery. One of the first I made was a stamp of a hell’s angel. I’ve got thousands of them now.”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (14)

    Up close

    “I use the magnifying glass to carve them.”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (15)

    Fragments

    “That’s one of my Tate Modern reliquaries hanging from the beams – it’s a piece of broken pot. You can buy it from their gift shop if you like.”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (16)

    This old thing?

    “That cushion is ancient and full of pottery dust. There’s something of the little old lady in her conservatory about it.”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (17)

    "Bikes have always been part of my identity."

    “I’ve never owned a car. Bikes have always been part of my identity. Trannies do tend to overcompensate by doing very macho stuff. I’m getting to an age now where I’m thinking of buying a car – probably a red sports car, something exotic and embarrassing. ”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (18)

    "Like the skin of my younger body"

    “These leathers are the first thing I ever had specially made, when I was 29. I look at them now like the skin of my younger body. I could probably squeeze into them now, like some kind of middle-aged sausage.”

    © Eamonn McCabe

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (19)

    Never knowingly understated

    “I bought this from Rachel Choi’s student fashion show. It weighs a tonne: clearly, an awful lot of artificial fibres have gone into it! It might be the most bonkers thing I own.”

    © Eamonn McCabe

  • Gallery

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (20)

    Grayson Perry RA, Artist's Robe, 2004.

    Embroidered silk brocade, leather, printed linen and ceramic buttons. 179 x 70 cm. Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro, London© Grayson Perry.

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (21)

    Grayson Perry RA, The Rosetta Vase, 2011.

    Glazed ceramic. Height 78.5 cm, diameter 40.7 cm. British Museum Collection. Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro, London© Grayson Perry.

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (22)

    Grayson Perry RA, World Leaders Attend the Marriage of Alan Measles and Claire Perry, 2009.

    52 cm x 32 cm. Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro, London© Grayson Perry.

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (23)

    Grayson Perry RA, World Leaders Attend the Marriage of Alan Measles and Claire Perry, 2009.

    Glazed ceramic. 52 cm x 32 cm. Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro, London© Grayson Perry.

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (24)

    Grayson Perry RA, Expulsion from Number 8 Eden Close, 2012.

    Wool, cotton, acrylic, polyester and silk tapestry. 200 x 400 cm. Courtesy the Artist and Victoria Miro, London© Grayson Perry.

    Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (25)

    Grayson Perry RA, Map of Truths and Beliefs, 2011.

    Wool and cotton tapestry woven by Flanders Tapestries from files prepared at Factum Arte. 290 x 690 cm. Courtesy the Artist and Paragon Press, London© Grayson Perry.

  • Selected CV

    Last updated 2018

    • Recent solo exhibitions

      2016Paper Tiger Whisky Soap Theatre (Dada Nice), Villa Arson, Nice

      2018Grayson Perry, KIASMA, Helskinki; touring to Monnaie de Paris, ParisGrayson Perry: Making Meaning, The Gallery at Windsor, Vero Beach, FloridaThe Vanity of Small Differences, Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin

      2017The Most Popular Art Exhibition Ever!, Serpentine Gallery, London; touring to Arnolfini, BristolMaking Himself Claire: Grayson Perry’s Dresses, Walker Art Gallery, LiverpoolGrayson Perry: The Life of Julie Cope, Firstsite Gallery, Colchester

      2016Hold Your Beliefs Lightly, Bonnefantenmuseum, Maastricht; touring to ARoS Aarhus Art Museum, Aarhus

      2015Provincial Punk, Turner Contemporary, MargateSmall Differences, Pera Museum, IstanbulMy Pretty Little Art Career, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney

      2014Who Are You?, National Portrait Gallery, LondonWalthamstow Tapestry, Winchester Discovery Centre

    • Selected collections

      Arts Council Collection, LondonBirmingham Museums & Art GalleryBrighton & Hove MuseumsBritish Council Collection, LondonThe British Library (Map Library), LondonBritish Museum, LondonChelmsford Museum, EssexCrafts Council Collection, LondonGallery of Modern Art, GlasgowGovernment Art Collection, LondonHouse of Commons Collection, LondonLeeds Museums and Galleries (City Art Gallery)Manchester City GalleriesMuseum of Art, Rhode Island School of DesignThe Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TexasThe Museum of Modern Art, New YorkStedelijk Museum, AmsterdamTate, LondonVictoria & Albert Museum, LondonYale Center for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut

    • Awards

      2017Royal Television Society Programme Award (Best Presenter and Best Arts Programme)Evening Standard Contemporary Art PrizeGrierson Award (Best Presenter)

      2016Political Studies Association AwardRIBA Honorary FellowshipGQ Men / Writer of the Year Award

      2015Chancellor of the University of the Arts, LondonTrustee of the British MuseumBAFTA (Best Specialist Factual)

      2013BAFTA (Best Specialist Factual)Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE)

      2003Turner Prize winner

    • Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (26)

      Art Sales at the RA

      The Island Of Bad Art

      Winner of 2003’s Turner Prize, Grayson Perry RA takes a swipe at the art establishment. His etching depicts an ‘island of bad art’ resembling Venice, home to the celebrated contemporary art biennale.

      British-born Perry’s etching presents the viewer with a 16th-century style map. And creates the same dissonance between conventional form and personal message the artist achieves in his best-known medium, ceramics. The print is available to buy through Art Sales at the RA.

      Buy now

Related articles

  • RA Recommends > 4 years ago From Linder’s radical feminist collages and Grayson Perry’s early pots, to the Barbican’s blockbuster survey of masculinity, here are 10 exhibitions you won’t want to miss.
  • RA Recommends < 5 years ago From Bridget Riley and the dazzling canvases of the Op-Art movement, to the culinary artefacts of the ancient world, here 10 shows across the UK that we recommend this month.
  • RA Exhibitions < 6 years ago As the 250th Summer Exhibition opens, Banksy has revealed that he entered the public submission exhibition under a pseudonym… Here’s the inside story.
  • RA Exhibitions < 6 years ago Take a look inside the 250th Summer Exhibition in this video with coordinator Grayson Perry RA, as he shows us some of his highlights of this year’s show.
  • RA Exhibitions 6 years ago What’s it like to put together the Summer Exhibition? We spoke to this year’s coordinator, Grayson Perry RA, and his band of fellow artists in charge of selecting and hanging the world’s largest open-submission art show.
  • Inside the Academy 6 years ago We don’t know if we’ve mentioned it, but the Royal Academy has had a major transformation – welcome to the new RA! Here are nine things you can expect from London’s new home for art and ideas.
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  • Opinion > 9 years ago The Royal Academician’s major exhibition in London turns to us, the people of modern Britain, unveiling 14 new portraits that spotlight the complexities behind our identity.
  • Artists > 9 years ago We caught up with Grayson Perry RA as he moved into his new Islington Studio, where he told us about ceramics, motorbikes and why he wears cashmere socks.
  • Artists 10 years ago A new artwork by Grayson Perry RA presents a special manifesto for the Royal Academy.
  • Opinion > 10 years ago Novelist Tracy Chevalier, who curates a new exhibition of quilts, argues that this traditional activity should be accepted as a contemporary art medium.

Associated books

2 results

  • Sir Grayson Perry RA Cycle of violence - London: 2012 11/910
  • Sir Grayson Perry RA Cycle of violence - London: 2002 14/1216

Schedule exhibition

When should this exhibition be published?

Sir Grayson Perry | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts (2024)

FAQs

Where did Grayson Perry go to art school? ›

Grayson Perry is a ceramic artist, social critic and winner of the 2003 Turner Prize. Born in Chelmsford, Grayson's formal introduction to art took place in 1978 when he completed a foundation course at Braintree College. He then went on to study for his BA in Fine Art at Portsmouth Polytechnic, graduating in 1982.

Has Grayson Perry got a partner? ›

How did Grayson Perry become famous? ›

The following year he published an autobiography, Portrait of the Artist as a Young Girl. Perry subsequently made a number of documentaries for Channel 4, becoming as well known as a television personality as an artist.

What does Grayson Perry's daughter do? ›

Who went to Cranbrook Academy of Art? ›

Notable artists, architects, and designers who have studied at Cranbrook Academy of Art include Adela Akers, Olga de Amaral, McArthur Binion, Peter Bohlin, Nick Cave, Niels Diffrient, Charles and Ray Eames, Edward Fella, Gere Kavanaugh, Florence Knoll, Jack Lenor Larsen, Donald Lipski, Fumihiko Maki, Myra Mimlitsch- ...

What is Grayson Perry's teddy called? ›

The original sculpture is held in the RA Collection and was itself based on Perry's famed childhood teddy bear, fondly known as Alan Measles.

Why is Grayson Perry being knighted? ›

Grayson Perry Knighted for Contributions to the Arts

With his flamboyant style and penchant for blurring the lines between art and craft, he has captured the attention of both art critics and the general public.

What is Grayson Perry's art style? ›

What did Philippa Perry say about ADHD? ›

I'm not saying ADHD doesn't exist, I'm saying it shouldn't be an identity and it shouldn't be self-diagnosed. We are more than our diagnoses - that's what I'm trying to say.

What is Grayson Perry's alter ego? ›

Grayson Perry is an English contemporary artist, who started his career making punk-inspired ceramics and films, before moving to tapestries and textiles. His art often features his alter-ego Claire and teddy bear, Alan Measles.

Where does Sir Grayson Perry live? ›

How many tapestries did Grayson Perry make? ›

Each of the six tapestries measure 6ft 6ins (2m) by 13ft (4m) and were woven in Flanders on a computer-controlled loom to designs created by the artist.

Who is the psychotherapist married to Grayson Perry? ›

Philippa, Lady Perry (née Fairclough; born 1 November 1957), is a British integrative psychotherapist and author.

How did Grayson Perry meet Philippa Perry? ›

Grayson has been with his partner psychotherapist Philippa Perry for more than 30 years after first meeting at a creative writing class in 1987. This year they will celebrate their 30-year wedding anniversary after tying he knot in 1992.

Has Grayson Perry got a sister? ›

Grayson Perry on X: "My sister, Helen she said she had never done a selfie, she lives on the Fens😕 http://t.co/RGzBQk1bIU" / X.

Where did Alma Thomas go to art school? ›

In 1907, when Thomas was fifteen years old, her father moved the family to Washington, D.C. She enrolled in Howard University, and in 1924 became the first graduate of its newly formed art department.

Where did Edward Hopper go to art school? ›

Hopper began art studies with a correspondence course in 1899. Soon he transferred to the New York School of Art and Design, the forerunner of Parsons School of Design. There, he studied for six years with teachers including William Merritt Chase, who instructed him in oil painting.

Where did Paul Klee go to art school? ›

In 1898, with his parents' reluctant permission, Klee began studying art at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich. He was an excellent draughtsman, though he didn't possess any natural color sense. He once stated: “During the third winter I even realized that I probably would never learn to paint”.

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