Etching (3 plates). At two-and-a-half metres long, 'Print for a Politician' is a large engraving that unfolds before our eyes. It presents an imaginary land divided into zones populated by forests, rocks and twisted spires. Tiny, spidery handwriting reveals labelled faux demographic groups from 'agnostics' and 'provincials', to 'homosexuals' and 'Scientologists'. Grayson Perry is interested in the superficial labels that we and the media at large apply to each other. Underpinning the artificiality of the labels, Perry does not want us to read too much significance into where and how he has placed them. He revealed that while working on â€Print for a Politician’ he â€...harboured a fantasy of it hanging in a minister's office, helping him to temper any prejudices he may have'. A modern take on political satire, the print was partly inspired by the â€Mappa Mundi’, the famous English medieval map that reveals a 13th-century interpretation of the world in spiritual and geographical terms.