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Observations about Cat Art

  • Cat painting is perhaps an evolutionary offshoot of a behaviour trait seen in some cats, commonly known marking.
  • Six of every ten cats have the habit of demarcating their territory with claw marks on trees, furniture etc.
  • Of these, only 0.001% will use paint and really try transferring them to another medium.
  • Among all the different breeds of cats, Birmans are the ones known to really enjoy wetting their paws.
  • Cat art may or may not be carried out with traditional art medium like paint.
  • You can explore your cat's preferences to mark with gravel, sand, or even fine litter material.
  • Remember your cat need not use conventional methods of painting - like canvas, paint and paper.
  • Even, soft wood, soft stone, soft boards or bark may help your cat to evolve an aesthetic sense.
  • What you can do to help encourage your cat to evolve aesthetically may be to play cat scratching games with your cat.
  • Immediately, after your cat has used the litter box, keep a paper ready or an old tree trunk or a piece of soft wood, hold a little string or a ball tied to a string and help your cat to play with the string on the bark, paper, board or wood.
  • How, you can do this is to make marks on the same places that your cat does and sort of encourage it to observe the marks that you make.
  • Each time, you can make slightly different looking marks with a slightly different odour and observe your cat's response to it.
  • Observe if your cat continuously scratches on only one place of the furniture like as if constructing a work of art.
  • See if your cat likes to play and make patterns with its food.
  • After scratching on a furniture, tree trunk or any other regularly used scratch surface, see if your cat takes great pleasure in observing the scratched surface.
  • If your cat has passed the 2D test, likes to watch TV and takes pleasure in scratching surfaces and making different patterns with the claws, then you know that you are on.
  • If your cat likes getting his or her feet wet, then you know that your cat is soon going to enjoy working with paint and paper.
  • Always remember to wash your pet's paws well and dry them with a soft, clean towel after every painting episode.
  • If you can, try to use organic or vegetable colours. They are safer.

 
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