The Giants are adding more bronze at AT&T Park to honor another golden alumnus.

The club announced Monday that on Aug. 13, it will unveil a statue of pitcher Gaylord Perry, who won 134 games for the Giants to start a 22-year major-league career that resulted in 314 wins, 3,534 strikeouts and his 1991 Hall of Fame induction.

Will Behrends, who sculpted the statues of Willie Mays, Willie McCovey, Orlando Cepeda and Juan Marichal that ring the ballpark and McCovey Cove, will create Perry’s. Artist and subject met in North Carolina on Monday.

Perry’s statue will stand at the corner of Second and King streets, a bookend to the Cepeda statue on the other side of the Second Street entrance.

And, no, Perry’s statue will not include a water feature to commemorate his reputation as a spitballer, which he has said was more imagined than real.

“We’re not letting anyone know what the pose will be,” said Mario Alioto, the Giants’ executive vice president of business operations. “We think it’s going to be striking.”

Perry spent more combined years with other teams, but his numbers in San Francisco were striking. He started 283 games and completed 125, including a 1968 no-hitter against the Cardinals.

“He’s a Hall of Famer,” Alioto said. “He was quite a Giant when he played here. It just felt right that if he had his number (36) retired we should celebrate his career with a statue. We’re thrilled about it.”

Perry, 77, was not available to comment because of his sitting with the sculptor.

Belt arbitration: The Giants continue to negotiate with the agent for first baseman Brandon Belt on a 2016 contract as a Wednesday arbitration deadline looms.

The sides started far apart, with Belt requesting $7.5 million and the Giants offering $5.3 million. If they can’t reach a deal by Wednesday, the case will be heard by a three-person arbitration panel in Arizona, which must choose one figure or the other based on the arguments presented.

Belt and the Giants had tossed out ideas for a multiyear deal, but with the hearing deadline looming, they are focused on a one-year contract for now.

The Giants have not had an arbitration hearing since 2004.

Henry Schulman is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. E-mail: hschulman@sfchronicle.com. Twitter: @hankschulman