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| Yorkshire landscape. |
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| Self-portrait in earlier years. |
David
Hockney died this week, on 9
th June 2026, a sad shock to me as he seemed
to have always been around
for most of my life. As I was born on July 28
th,
1934, and he on July 9
th, 1937, that statement does seem to fit with
the figures! With him, I never had the picture of an elderly man in my mind; it was
always the young open smiling face, adorned with large spectacles and topped by
a blond mop of bleached hair. He was the fourth of five children of an accountancy clerk
who became a Conscientious Objector during WW2, not a popular public position I
would assume, from my early childhood memories of the zeal of the anti-Nazi German
sentiment which was part of the air one breathed in ordinary, day to day life
then.
Hockney was
lucky in that both his parents strongly supported the development of his artistic
abilities and subsequent career choices. After Bradford Grammar School, Hockney
attended Bradford College of Art followed by the R.C.A., the Royal College of
Art in London, where he featured, along with Peter Blake, in an historically notable exhibition,
New Contemporaries, which announced the arrival of British Pop Art, a
movement with which he became strongly associated. Towards the end of his
student years, the RCA refused to allow him to graduate unless he completed an
assignment of a drawing of a model from life. [1962] He painted Life
Painting for a Diploma in protest and refused to write an
essay also required for the final examination, insisting that he should be
assessed on his artwork alone. While still a student, Hockney had begun to
exhibit and the RCA recognized his burgeoning talent and his growing reputation
by changing its regulations and awarding him the coveted Diploma without the
essay! This enabled him to become an art lecturer, which he saw as a means to an end, and he taught briefly at Maidstone
College of Art, followed by teaching spells in the University of Iowa [1964];
Uni of Colorado, Boulder [1965]; Uni of California, Los Angeles [1966/7] and
Uni of California, Berkeley [1967].  |
| Tree- and cloud-scape in Normandy. |
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Between Kilham and Langsoft. Yorkshire. |
Hockney had
moved to America in 1964, hence his U.S. university placements and art, and he
became almost intoxicated with the brilliance of the natural light enhancing the bright colours around him, particularly
in California. He had always been open to new ideas and to experimentation in
his art, and now he moved to painting in acrylics, using vibrant colours, to portray
a series of swimming pool paintings. He spent more than the next decade living
in a series of homes in Los Angeles, London and Paris, in 1974 beginning a
personal relationship with Gregory Evans who moved to live with him in 1976, remaining
for many years as a business partner.
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Garrowby Hill. One of his most famous paintings, demonstrating his love of bright colours. Poster 1998
|
As to his financial affairs little detail is known except that he moved, over his life, from modest beginnings to a greater opulence in that in 1978 he rented a home in
the Hollywood Hills which he later bought, incorporating his studio into the main house. He also owned a large beach house on the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu which he sold in 1999 for about $1.5 million.
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| Self portrait in red braces, with brush, in later years |
During the 1990s Hockney
returned to Yorkshire every few months to visit his mother who died in 1999.
Until 1997, his visits were short but in 1999 after her death, persuaded by a friend, he started
to portray local surroundings, originally from early memories, some from his
boyhood, but in 1998, he completed his important painting from life, of the
Yorkshire landmark,
Garrowby Hill. The Yorkshire landscape continued to exert a
strong influence on David and he returned there for increasingly long periods and by
2003, was painting in oils and watercolours en plein air, finally taking up residence in a converted ‘
bed and breakfast’ in Bridlington, only about 75
miles from where his life had begun. He
produced a series of watercolours entitled,
Midsummer: East
Yorkshire 2003/4 following a period of intense study of the medium and
began to create works of art comprising paintings of smaller canvases, between
2 and 50, placed together, Some of these
were art on a large scale and he used digital photographic reproductions to
study and assess the day’s work.
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Chair, pool and cactus. Normandy Print Pleasingly geometric!
|
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| The Arrival of Spring in Normandy. 2020. iPad |
In 2019
Hockney created a studio at La Grande Cour, a rustic farmhouse near
Beuvron-en-Auge in Normandy where he spent a whole year using a sketchpad and
iPad to paint the changing seasons in a series of images which he said were inspired
by the Bayeux Tapestry, another Normandy export.He had an
extraordinary talent; inventive and exuberant, ever alert to, and receptive of, emerging pop art. and his versatility meant that he could work happily in painting, drawing, printmaking, photography, stage design and in later digital media such as iPad and iPhone drawings.
His childhood was a happy one; he was apparently oblivious to the smoke-blackened
industrial
.jpg) |
| Hockney in Washington Square in the Seventies. |
landscape outside his door. He seemed unaffected by nostalgia or
snobbery and his art, particularly his early art, simply and unselfconsciously depicts
modern life, his life as he observed and lived it. His paintings always give a
visual pleasure to the observer as he shares his own joy in light and in the beauty of
everyday life, especially including the male figure. Hockney was gay but while
he was unusually direct in his treatment of gay desire, making it part of his subject matter, it was remarkable in that, in
the early 1960s, he felt so comfortable in expressing homosexuality in his art, when it was still illegal with prison a strong probability for
‘
offenders’. Being gay was just part of his truth which he lived and
painted and thus he unselfconsciously integrated his identity into his art. Both Hockney and his art were insouciant and joyful, but also, innocent and untroubled. His important artistic legacy lies in his innovative approach to light, space and perception with his readiness to integrate both traditional and modern techniques in his highly individual approach to his art.
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Pool with two figures California.
And, below, two more of his swimming pool paintings. |