- VICTO
- All Artworks
- The Persistence of Cat
The Persistence of Cat (2026) Original Oil Painting by VICTO
30.48 x 30.48 x 3.81cm (unframed)
£593.95
Original artwork description
The Persistence of Cat | Cat Visiting Dalí
What if the most famous melting clock in art history had a cat sleeping on it?
In this continuation of the traveling cat series, the familiar black feline wanders into the surreal dreamscape of Salvador Dalí’s The Persistence of Memory. Here, the cat has done what cats do best: claimed the impossible as a perfectly reasonable place to nap.
There is a cat draped across a melting branch.
He is not questioning reality. He is not concerned about the collapsing laws of time and space. He is simply resting — heavy with indifference, suspended between sleep and wakefulness, completely at ease inside a world that makes no logical sense.
I kept the essential elements of Dalí’s masterpiece: the barren landscape, the twisted tree, the soft clock slowly surrendering its shape. I simply introduced a cat. And somehow the surrealism becomes even more believable. Because if any creature could remain comfortable while time itself dissolves, it would be a cat.
This is another stop in the traveling cat series. He has already wandered through Van Gogh’s star-filled sky, hidden inside Malevich’s minimalism, floated through Monet’s water lilies, screamed for Munch, and found comfort inside Klimt’s golden embrace. Now he arrives in Dalí’s dream world and treats it like his personal afternoon nap spot.
I paint animals as emotional characters rather than decorative subjects. They become reflections of recognizable human experiences. In this work, the cat embodies a feeling many of us secretly desire: the ability to stop worrying about time altogether. Deadlines, schedules, plans, expectations — everything melts away. What remains is presence.
The painting balances humor with a deeper emotional undertone. At first, viewers smile at the absurdity of a cat sleeping across a melting clock. Then a quieter realization appears: perhaps the cat understands something we do not. Perhaps the healthiest response to the constant pressure of time is not resistance, but surrender.
The warm desert palette, pale blue sky, and flowing forms create a dreamlike atmosphere that feels simultaneously peaceful and unsettling. The cat’s dark silhouette anchors the composition, becoming the calm center of an unstable universe.
This painting is for people who love art history, surrealism, and the gentle wisdom hidden inside absurd situations.
It suits:
— Admirers of Dalí and Surrealism
— Collectors of narrative contemporary art
— Cat lovers who appreciate humor with depth
— Viewers drawn to themes of time, rest, and presence
— Collectors following the ongoing traveling cat series
The palette of warm sands, soft blues, deep blacks, and ivory tones allows the work to function as both a conversation piece and a contemplative artwork.
Works well in:
— Contemporary living rooms
— Reading corners and libraries
— Creative studios and workspaces
— Eclectic interiors with art historical references
— Gallery walls built around storytelling and personality
— Spaces dedicated to reflection, imagination, and humor
At 30 × 30 cm (12 × 12 in), the piece works beautifully as a standalone artwork or as part of the growing traveling cat collection.
This painting is part of my “Creatures Who Feel” series — specifically the sub-series where one wandering cat travels through art history and quietly makes each masterpiece his own.
His journey so far:
— Starry Night Visitor (after Van Gogh)
— The Suprematist Cat (after Malevich)
— Monet’s Quiet Guest (after Monet)
— The Cat Scream (after Munch)
— The Golden Cat (after Klimt)
— The Persistence of Cat (after Dalí — this work)
Each painting stands independently, but together they tell one continuous story — a cat wandering freely through the emotional landscapes of art history.
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
14 day money back guaranteeLearn more
Original artwork description
The Persistence of Cat | Cat Visiting Dalí
What if the most famous melting clock in art history had a cat sleeping on it?
In this continuation of the traveling cat series, the familiar black feline wanders into the surreal dreamscape of Salvador Dalí’s The Persistence of Memory. Here, the cat has done what cats do best: claimed the impossible as a perfectly reasonable place to nap.
There is a cat draped across a melting branch.
He is not questioning reality. He is not concerned about the collapsing laws of time and space. He is simply resting — heavy with indifference, suspended between sleep and wakefulness, completely at ease inside a world that makes no logical sense.
I kept the essential elements of Dalí’s masterpiece: the barren landscape, the twisted tree, the soft clock slowly surrendering its shape. I simply introduced a cat. And somehow the surrealism becomes even more believable. Because if any creature could remain comfortable while time itself dissolves, it would be a cat.
This is another stop in the traveling cat series. He has already wandered through Van Gogh’s star-filled sky, hidden inside Malevich’s minimalism, floated through Monet’s water lilies, screamed for Munch, and found comfort inside Klimt’s golden embrace. Now he arrives in Dalí’s dream world and treats it like his personal afternoon nap spot.
I paint animals as emotional characters rather than decorative subjects. They become reflections of recognizable human experiences. In this work, the cat embodies a feeling many of us secretly desire: the ability to stop worrying about time altogether. Deadlines, schedules, plans, expectations — everything melts away. What remains is presence.
The painting balances humor with a deeper emotional undertone. At first, viewers smile at the absurdity of a cat sleeping across a melting clock. Then a quieter realization appears: perhaps the cat understands something we do not. Perhaps the healthiest response to the constant pressure of time is not resistance, but surrender.
The warm desert palette, pale blue sky, and flowing forms create a dreamlike atmosphere that feels simultaneously peaceful and unsettling. The cat’s dark silhouette anchors the composition, becoming the calm center of an unstable universe.
This painting is for people who love art history, surrealism, and the gentle wisdom hidden inside absurd situations.
It suits:
— Admirers of Dalí and Surrealism
— Collectors of narrative contemporary art
— Cat lovers who appreciate humor with depth
— Viewers drawn to themes of time, rest, and presence
— Collectors following the ongoing traveling cat series
The palette of warm sands, soft blues, deep blacks, and ivory tones allows the work to function as both a conversation piece and a contemplative artwork.
Works well in:
— Contemporary living rooms
— Reading corners and libraries
— Creative studios and workspaces
— Eclectic interiors with art historical references
— Gallery walls built around storytelling and personality
— Spaces dedicated to reflection, imagination, and humor
At 30 × 30 cm (12 × 12 in), the piece works beautifully as a standalone artwork or as part of the growing traveling cat collection.
This painting is part of my “Creatures Who Feel” series — specifically the sub-series where one wandering cat travels through art history and quietly makes each masterpiece his own.
His journey so far:
— Starry Night Visitor (after Van Gogh)
— The Suprematist Cat (after Malevich)
— Monet’s Quiet Guest (after Monet)
— The Cat Scream (after Munch)
— The Golden Cat (after Klimt)
— The Persistence of Cat (after Dalí — this work)
Each painting stands independently, but together they tell one continuous story — a cat wandering freely through the emotional landscapes of art history.
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








