Cat A. – Alpha Females

Opening Night: Friday 5th September, 5–9pm

Exhibition continues: 6th–21st September | Wednesday–Sunday, 12–4pm
Artist Talk: Sunday 7th September, 2–4pm

With contributions from other local artists

Please note for the exhibition: Parental Advisory – Explicit Content

What does it mean to be an Alpha Female in 2025?

Artist Cat. A invites audiences into her loud, funny, and deeply personal world with Alpha Females – a bold new exhibition opening this September at Art Space Portsmouth, alongside a smattering of work from other local artists.
The exhibition showcases Cat’s text-based artworks created over the last two years — a mash-up of hand-painted slogans, overheard conversations, and private feelings blasted onto public objects. Whether it’s a cardboard pyramid critiquing Reform UK while celebrating Shania Twain, or a flag confronting an ex’s racist family members, Cat’s work is deeply personal, sharply political, and disarmingly funny.
Using discarded materials, charity shop finds, and whatever’s hiding in someone’s cupboard, Cat transforms everyday objects into protest banners, t-shirts, and emotional outbursts. Her pieces are painted in a distinct freeform capital-letter style using acrylics and Posca pens – raw, urgent, and unmistakably her own.

Highlights include:

• “Reasons Not to Call Him” — an artist’s book of illustrated dating reflections, shown alongside 24 prints from its pages
• Personal banners like “Hannah Smith Is My Religion”
• Rants in paint about ex-boyfriends, the fear of scented candles, and Jacob Rees-Mogg
• Bunting and flags reimagined as miniature protest sites

While often humorous, the work digs deeper – exploring modern dating, identity, social justice, and the fine line between public performance and private catharsis. “My work is my therapy,” Cat says. “But I hope people laugh. Or at least feel seen.”

Join us for a no-filter artist’s talk on Sunday 7th September, where Cat A will speak about her process, personal inspirations, and the sometimes absurd relationship between art, activism, and exes.