Sunderland Echo

Life’s rich tapestry comes home

- BY KATY WHEELER

Aseries of celebrated tapestries featuring a Sunderland social club, meat draw, city cage fighters and a night down the town, which have toured the country, are back where it all began on Wearside.

A decade after Turner Prizewinni­ng artist Grayson Perry visited Sunderland for his exploratio­n into British taste and class, his Vanity of Small Difference­s exhibition is back on display at Sunderland Museum & Winter Gardens.

The exhibition features six large-scale tapestries in total, with two inspired by the artist’s time in the city during which he visited Heppies Social Club in North Hylton Road, pigeon crees, met age fighters and more, details which have been woven into the tapestries.

Agony in the Car Park and Adoration of the Cage Fighters, which each measure two metres by four metres, chart the early life of fictional character Tim Rakewell who goes on a ‘class journey’ after inheriting a fortune and the tastes and aesthetics of the different social groups he encounters along the way.

On their first visit to the city in 2013, the tapestries became the most-visited exhibition in the museum gallery’s history – and still are – with 125,000 visitors.

Jo Cunnigham, exhibition­s, collection­s and archives manager at Sunderland Museum, said it was great to have the pieces which are so rich in local detail back in the city.

"It’s ten years since Grayson visited Sunderland for the TV programme which accompanie­d the exhibition and nine years since we last had the tapestries on show, and in that time he’s be

come a national treasure,” said Jo.

The tapestries went back on show on Saturday and have already got visitors talking.

"These are very accessible pieces,” explained Jo. “Grayson knows how to talk to people about art and to get them to engage with it in a different way. When he meets people he doesn’t judge them, he’s got real integrity and respect for people and that shows in his art.”

At the time of the project’s inception, Grayson’s daughter had been studying at Durham University and he was looking for a Northern working class city which he could study to showcase its culture and people. Sunderland was chosen as a less obvious choice than Newcastle and its skyline of cranes and the Stadium of Light is intricatel­y depicted in the pieces.

The exhibition is ticketed for numbers reasons but is free to attend and Jo says it really helps to attract new audiences to the venue. It’s also inspired a series of learning projects which are running alongside the exhibition.

"We spent so long doing things online during the pandemic that people are really keen to be back and seeing the real thing in person,” said Jo. “It’s great to see the gallery buzzing, this exhibition feels like a real celebratio­n.”

The six Vanity of Small Difference­s pieces are joined in the main gallery by a further tapestry by Grayson Perry, Comfort Blanket, a huge portrait of Britishnes­s, which was inspired by a refugee who had left Hungary fleeing the Soviet invasion in 1956 who described Britain as her ‘security blanket’.

This is the first time Comfort Blanket has been shown in the region, and the tapestry is on loan from the Victoria Miro Gallery in London.

:: The Vanity of Small Difference­s closes on Sunday, June 5. Free tickets can be booked at www.sunderland­culture.org.uk

‘He’s got integrity and

respect for people’

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 ?? ?? Artist Grayson Perry with the tapestries when they first went on show in Sunderland in 2013.
Artist Grayson Perry with the tapestries when they first went on show in Sunderland in 2013.
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 ?? ?? Exhibition­s collection­s and archive manager Jo Cunningham in front of The Agony in the Car Park, one of the tapestries inspired by Perry's time in Sunderland. Vanity ofSmallDif­ferencesis atSunderla­ndMuseum&WinterGard­ensuntilJu­ne5.
Exhibition­s collection­s and archive manager Jo Cunningham in front of The Agony in the Car Park, one of the tapestries inspired by Perry's time in Sunderland. Vanity ofSmallDif­ferencesis atSunderla­ndMuseum&WinterGard­ensuntilJu­ne5.
 ?? ?? Details from The Agony in the Car Park, inspired by Sunderland scenes. Inset, Comfort Blanket.
Details from The Agony in the Car Park, inspired by Sunderland scenes. Inset, Comfort Blanket.

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