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- Pop Cat
Pop Cat (2026) Original Oil Painting by VICTO
30.48 x 30.48 x 3.81cm (unframed)
£596.66
Original artwork description
Pop Cat | Cat Visiting Warhol
Contemporary cat painting inspired by Andy Warhol and the visual language of Pop Art. This original oil painting on canvas features a tabby cat repeated across four brightly colored panels, blending pop culture references, humor, and emotional storytelling into a character-driven composition. Part of the ongoing Traveling Cat series, the artwork reimagines influential movements in art history through the adventures of a curious feline traveler.
What happens when a wandering cat arrives in the world of Andy Warhol?
In this chapter of the traveling cat’s journey, the familiar feline steps into one of the most recognizable visual languages of the twentieth century. Bright colors replace naturalism. Repetition becomes the subject. Personality transforms into an icon.
There is a cat in a Warhol painting.
Or perhaps there are four.
The same face appears again and again across bold blocks of turquoise, red, green, and yellow. Yet each version feels slightly different. A shift in color changes the mood. A different eye catches the viewer’s attention. The repeated image becomes less about the cat itself and more about how perception changes through context.
I was drawn to the idea that Warhol transformed everyday subjects into cultural symbols. Soup cans, celebrities, flowers — ordinary images became instantly recognizable icons through repetition. In this painting, the traveling cat receives the same treatment. The result is both playful and strangely fitting. After all, cats have been cultivating celebrity status long before social media existed.
This is another stop in the traveling cat series. The wandering feline has already explored Van Gogh’s swirling skies, rested inside Malevich’s minimalist universe, drifted through Monet’s water lilies, borrowed Munch’s anxiety, wandered through Dalí’s dreamscapes, disappeared among Damien Hirst’s spots, embraced Klimt’s golden world, and investigated Jeff Koons’ balloon sculptures. Now it arrives in the vibrant world of Pop Art, where color becomes energy and repetition becomes identity.
I paint animals as emotional characters rather than decorative subjects. In this series, the cat becomes a guide through art history, carrying familiar emotions into iconic artistic worlds. Here, it embodies confidence, playfulness, self-expression, and the curious relationship between individuality and mass culture.
The composition balances homage with humor. Viewers may first smile at the sight of a cat transformed into a pop icon, but beneath the bright colors lies a reflection on visibility, identity, and the ways images acquire meaning through repetition.
Painted in oil on canvas, the work combines expressive realism with the bold graphic sensibility of Pop Art. High-contrast black lines interact with saturated fields of color, while the cat’s mischievous expression remains the emotional anchor of the composition. The result feels simultaneously contemporary, nostalgic, and unmistakably playful.
This painting is for viewers who appreciate art history with personality — collectors who enjoy bold color, cultural references, and artworks that combine wit with visual impact.
It suits:
— Admirers of Andy Warhol and Pop Art
— Cat lovers with a sense of humor
— Collectors drawn to contemporary narrative art
— Viewers who enjoy art historical reinterpretations
— Those following the ongoing Traveling Cat series
The palette of electric blue, vivid red, lime green, bright yellow, and deep black creates an energetic focal point that immediately captures attention.
Works well in:
— Contemporary living rooms
— Creative studios and offices
— Colorful gallery walls
— Modern apartments
— Design-forward cafés and boutiques
— Spaces that celebrate creativity, humor, and individuality
At 30 × 30 cm (12 × 12 in), the piece functions beautifully as a standalone artwork or as part of the expanding Traveling Cat collection.
This painting is part of my “Creatures Who Feel” series — specifically the sub-series where one wandering cat travels through the worlds of influential artists and quietly makes each masterpiece its own.
His journey so far:
— Starry Night Visitor (after Van Gogh)
— The Suprematist Cat (after Malevich)
— Monet’s Quiet Guest (after Monet)
— The Persistence of Cat (after Dalí)
— The Cat Scream (after Munch)
— The Golden Cat (after Klimt)
— Spot the Cat (after Damien Hirst)
— Balloon Cat (after Jeff Koons)
— Pop Cat (after Andy Warhol — this work)
Each painting stands independently, but together they tell one continuous story — a cat wandering freely through art history, bringing curiosity, humor, and emotional warmth wherever it goes.
Medium: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: 30 × 30 cm (12 × 12 in)
Format: Square, ready to hang
Artist: VICTO
Materials used:
oil on canvas
Details:
- Oil painting on Canvas
- One of a kind artwork
- Size: 30.48 x 30.48 x 3.81cm (unframed)
- Ready to hang
- Signed on the back
- Style: Urban and Pop
- Subject: Animals and birds
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Original artwork description
Pop Cat | Cat Visiting Warhol
Contemporary cat painting inspired by Andy Warhol and the visual language of Pop Art. This original oil painting on canvas features a tabby cat repeated across four brightly colored panels, blending pop culture references, humor, and emotional storytelling into a character-driven composition. Part of the ongoing Traveling Cat series, the artwork reimagines influential movements in art history through the adventures of a curious feline traveler.
What happens when a wandering cat arrives in the world of Andy Warhol?
In this chapter of the traveling cat’s journey, the familiar feline steps into one of the most recognizable visual languages of the twentieth century. Bright colors replace naturalism. Repetition becomes the subject. Personality transforms into an icon.
There is a cat in a Warhol painting.
Or perhaps there are four.
The same face appears again and again across bold blocks of turquoise, red, green, and yellow. Yet each version feels slightly different. A shift in color changes the mood. A different eye catches the viewer’s attention. The repeated image becomes less about the cat itself and more about how perception changes through context.
I was drawn to the idea that Warhol transformed everyday subjects into cultural symbols. Soup cans, celebrities, flowers — ordinary images became instantly recognizable icons through repetition. In this painting, the traveling cat receives the same treatment. The result is both playful and strangely fitting. After all, cats have been cultivating celebrity status long before social media existed.
This is another stop in the traveling cat series. The wandering feline has already explored Van Gogh’s swirling skies, rested inside Malevich’s minimalist universe, drifted through Monet’s water lilies, borrowed Munch’s anxiety, wandered through Dalí’s dreamscapes, disappeared among Damien Hirst’s spots, embraced Klimt’s golden world, and investigated Jeff Koons’ balloon sculptures. Now it arrives in the vibrant world of Pop Art, where color becomes energy and repetition becomes identity.
I paint animals as emotional characters rather than decorative subjects. In this series, the cat becomes a guide through art history, carrying familiar emotions into iconic artistic worlds. Here, it embodies confidence, playfulness, self-expression, and the curious relationship between individuality and mass culture.
The composition balances homage with humor. Viewers may first smile at the sight of a cat transformed into a pop icon, but beneath the bright colors lies a reflection on visibility, identity, and the ways images acquire meaning through repetition.
Painted in oil on canvas, the work combines expressive realism with the bold graphic sensibility of Pop Art. High-contrast black lines interact with saturated fields of color, while the cat’s mischievous expression remains the emotional anchor of the composition. The result feels simultaneously contemporary, nostalgic, and unmistakably playful.
This painting is for viewers who appreciate art history with personality — collectors who enjoy bold color, cultural references, and artworks that combine wit with visual impact.
It suits:
— Admirers of Andy Warhol and Pop Art
— Cat lovers with a sense of humor
— Collectors drawn to contemporary narrative art
— Viewers who enjoy art historical reinterpretations
— Those following the ongoing Traveling Cat series
The palette of electric blue, vivid red, lime green, bright yellow, and deep black creates an energetic focal point that immediately captures attention.
Works well in:
— Contemporary living rooms
— Creative studios and offices
— Colorful gallery walls
— Modern apartments
— Design-forward cafés and boutiques
— Spaces that celebrate creativity, humor, and individuality
At 30 × 30 cm (12 × 12 in), the piece functions beautifully as a standalone artwork or as part of the expanding Traveling Cat collection.
This painting is part of my “Creatures Who Feel” series — specifically the sub-series where one wandering cat travels through the worlds of influential artists and quietly makes each masterpiece its own.
His journey so far:
— Starry Night Visitor (after Van Gogh)
— The Suprematist Cat (after Malevich)
— Monet’s Quiet Guest (after Monet)
— The Persistence of Cat (after Dalí)
— The Cat Scream (after Munch)
— The Golden Cat (after Klimt)
— Spot the Cat (after Damien Hirst)
— Balloon Cat (after Jeff Koons)
— Pop Cat (after Andy Warhol — this work)
Each painting stands independently, but together they tell one continuous story — a cat wandering freely through art history, bringing curiosity, humor, and emotional warmth wherever it goes.
Medium: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: 30 × 30 cm (12 × 12 in)
Format: Square, ready to hang
Artist: VICTO
Materials used:
oil on canvas
Details:
- Oil painting on Canvas
- One of a kind artwork
- Size: 30.48 x 30.48 x 3.81cm (unframed)
- Ready to hang
- Signed on the back
- Style: Urban and Pop
- Subject: Animals and birds








