Courtesy of the artistArt & Photography / FeatureArt & Photography / FeatureCato Ink’s paintings offer an experimental vision of Black British lifeInspired by everyday scenes from his south London stomping grounds, Cato Ink’s collaged paintings have an ‘uncle quality’ShareLink copied ✔️May 12, 2026May 12, 2026Text Alayo Akinkugbe Styling Andra-Amelia Buhai Photography Tara LC Sood Cato Ink This story is taken from the spring 2026 issue of Dazed, which is on sale internationally now. Order a copy of the magazine here. Many of the people in Cato Ink’s paintings have what the artist describes as an “uncle quality". “I grew up listening to my dad and uncles bantering and telling stories,” he says. “That's how I learned what it meant to be a man in the world.” Ink tries to recapture that essence in his work, trawling through photography archives or taking pictures of strangers on the streets. His paintings mostly portray Black people at leisure: playing musical instruments or card games, sitting at bars or lounging in beds. Born and raised in Brighton, Ink – real name Toby Grant – works from his studio in south London, near the green refuge of Burgess Park. “It’s the nicest room I've ever rented,” he says of the light-filled space that he shares with his girlfriend, Gloria, who is also a painter. “It’s much nicer than our flat.” Courtesy of the artist Ink's work is characterised by opaque blocks of colour and vivid interiors, such as 60s-style diners and artists' studios-settings that are “a mix of imaginary places, based on looking through the window in a shop in Peckham or hearing a story from [his] dad back in the day”. His figures have enlarged hands, blurry faces and fragmented, cubist bodies, achieved through a combination of photography, oil or acrylic, airbrushing and collaged fabric. Painting in an ad-hoc manner, Ink starts with the faces and building out the rest of the seene. He cites Pablo Picasso and Romare Bearden as two of his major influences, adding that working with his sister, collage artist Jazz Grant, after dropping out of his graphic design degree was a hugely formative experience. Courtesy of the artist Hair is a recurring theme in Ink’s work, with his 2025 self-titled solo exhibition at Saatchi Yates featuring two large-scale paintings of a barbershop and a hair salon respectively. “It’s a fun way to accentuate a character for me,” he says. “As a kid, the only time I met my grandad he gave me an Afro comb. I went home and combed my hair out as big as I could." His elder sister worried that his classmates would tease him at school, but he “didn’t give a shit”. In addition to being a painter, Ink has a musical practice and has recently started making demos again. Music had taken a backseat while he worked on exhibitions, but his passions have always existed in parallel. “Whenever I was writing raps, I was also drawing on the pages,” he says. “I started producing my own music around the same time I started painting, as opposed to just rapping on my mates' beats.” Whatever the medium, Ink’s art is bound by the same instinctive, experimental approach that has already become his signature. Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.TrendingDeath is everywhere in beauty right nowFrom malnourished celebrity bodies on the red carpet to the use of cadaver fat in plastic surgery, death has become an aesthetic, a mood and a mode of contemporary beautyBeautyArt & PhotographyIn pictures: The glamour of Nigerian American femmes SamsungLife & CultureWhat went down at Dazed Club’s drop-in skate session with SamsungArt & PhotographyThese portraits capture the artists and club kids of Mexico CityMusicCORTIS are bringing punk to K-Pop: ‘We don’t give a damn’BeautyNude awakening: Meet the young people embracing naturismArt & Photography8 highlights from Venice Biennale 2026Art & PhotographyThings To Come: Porn saves the world in Maja Malou Lyse’s ‘bimbo sci-fi’Beauty10 of the hottest Instagram accounts fusing art, sex and eroticaEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy