Mon. Feb 2nd, 2026

Paper Cut – giant sized child-like artworks at the Saatchi conceals biting social commentary


Priest: Paper Cut - giant sized child-like artwork at the Saatchi adds biting social commentary

It’s not just The Yard that’s worth seeing at the Saatchi Gallery in Chelsea right now – I really enjoyed this work by PRIEST.

Priest: Paper Cut - giant sized child-like artwork at the Saatchi adds biting social commentary

The gallery provides the necessary blurb:

PAPER CUT turns the gallery into a giant children’s art table, scattered with crayons, glue sticks, and bright, fragile creations.

 

Among the mess are an abandoned popsicle-stick house, a life size diorama, macaroni paintings, and pipe-cleaner figures caught mid-gesture.

 

Created by PRIEST, the installation reimagines childhood play as social archaeology, exposing the city’s hidden layers of class, chaos, and imitation.

 

Beneath the colour lies London itself: the housing crisis, youth violence, influencer culture, and the weary humour of modern life.

 

PAPER CUT questions what’s left of art once it grows up, when spontaneity hardens into strategy, and honesty becomes a pose, wondering if the child who first picked up the crayon might have understood it better right from the start.

Priest: Paper Cut - giant sized child-like artwork at the Saatchi adds biting social commentary

Priest: Paper Cut - giant sized child-like artwork at the Saatchi adds biting social commentary

Priest: Paper Cut - giant sized child-like artwork at the Saatchi adds biting social commentary

Priest: Paper Cut - giant sized child-like artwork at the Saatchi adds biting social commentary

Priest: Paper Cut - giant sized child-like artwork at the Saatchi adds biting social commentary

Priest: Paper Cut - giant sized child-like artwork at the Saatchi adds biting social commentary

Priest: Paper Cut - giant sized child-like artwork at the Saatchi adds biting social commentary

Priest: Paper Cut - giant sized child-like artwork at the Saatchi adds biting social commentary

 

More info:

Saachi Gallery (until 25 Jan 2026)
Duke of York’s HQ
King’s Road
London, SW3 4RY

OPENING HOURS
10am-6pm, 7 days a week, last entry 5:30pm

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