Telling a story of class and taste, aspiration and identity, tapestry
series The Vanity of Small Differences saw Turner Prize-winning artist
Grayson Perry travel the length and breadth of the UK, 'on safari
amongst the taste tribes of Britain'. The result is a monumental
exploration of the 'emotional investment we make in the things we choose
to live with, wear, eat, read or drive.' The six vibrant and highly
detailed tapestries presented here bear the influence both of early
Renaissance painting and of William Hogarth's moralising series,
literally weaving characters, incidents and objects from the artist's
research into a modern-day version of A Rake's Progress (1733).
Featuring essays by journalist Suzanne Moore (The Guardian, The Mail)
and Grayson Perry, alongside extensive commentary on each of the
tapestries and their making, this book is an essential companion to one
of the key contemporary art works of the last decade. Originally printed
in 2013. Reprinted in 2022.