
Plethora of Cats Study 448/850
THE ROAD TO 392 CATS When I first met Audrey Geisel in 1996, she told me about the canvas Ted kept on his easel for several years. A Plethora of Cats was his creative sanctuary, a work he would turn to at night after shutting down his children's book studio for the day. She remembers him contemplatively standing at the easel, rocking back and forth and adding cat's in what appeared to be an almost meditative exercise. Ted ultimately ended the painting with 392 technicolor cats. Paint, rock-back, step-in and repeat. I was under the impression this was a spontaneous act of creativity, and that somehow he managed to turn it into one of the most complex paintings he ever made. It struck me as perhaps the finest and most iconic painting in the entire collection, so Audrey and I decided it would accompany The Indistinet Cot as the first release in The Art of Dr. Seuss Collection. However, nearly 10 years after my first meeting with Audrey, I was rummaging through his now famous hidden closet