David Hockney’s Landscape paintings are highly influential to my practice. The paintings are almost split into sections and different areas, which is relational to my work. Each section of fi…
A world premiere exhibition focuses on the last decade of the British artist’s vibrant work, including hundreds of images the 79-year-old artist drew on apps
David Hockney’s Landscape paintings are highly influential to my practice. The paintings are almost split into sections and different areas, which is relational to my work. Each section of fi…
Last year David Hockney moved from Yorkshire to LA. It has rejuvenated him, he tells Tim Lewis, before answering questions from Observer readers and leading cultural figures
David Hockney’s iPad art will unleash your inner artist
One of England’s most versatile and inventive artists of the postwar era, Hockney became widely known in the 1960s for his vivid landscapes, domestic scenes, and intimate portraits born in California. The Arrival of Spring, Normandy, 2020 marks his third series documenting the blossoming of spring, having done his first in 2011 and the second in 2013. For this latest project, he observed the richness of the season from the bucolic surroundings of rural Normandy. Working en plein air (in the open air), he spent his days scrutinizing and recording the subtle, daily changes in the plants and light as spring emerged and took hold with all its drama and glory. The plein air approach was particularly fitting for his endeavor due to Normandy’s associations with the origin of French Impressionism. As Hockney noted, Monet witnessed and recorded 40 springs in nearby Giverny.However, unlike his Impressionist predecessors and in keeping with his long-held embrace of contemporary technology (he has used fax machines, laser photocopiers, and other 20th- and 21st-century digital instruments throughout his six-decade career), Hockney used the medium of the iPad for The Arrival of Spring, Normandy, 2020.
David Hockney He is an English painter and photographer. In the 1980s, he began to produce photo collages and he called it as “joiners” or “photomontage”. It is where you co…
An exhibition of David Hockney’s works of the past decade is immersive and often mesmerising.
David Hockney is one of the most celebrated artists of our time. His paintings are instantly recognizable, and his use of color is unrivaled. Hockney is also
Hockney is “a proper dandy”, as his friend, Christopher Simon Sykes once remarked – and the picture of a very English kind of elegance
One of England’s most versatile and inventive artists of the postwar era, Hockney became widely known in the 1960s for his vivid landscapes, domestic scenes, and intimate portraits born in California. The Arrival of Spring, Normandy, 2020 marks his third series documenting the blossoming of spring, having done his first in 2011 and the second in 2013. For this latest project, he observed the richness of the season from the bucolic surroundings of rural Normandy. Working en plein air (in the open air), he spent his days scrutinizing and recording the subtle, daily changes in the plants and light as spring emerged and took hold with all its drama and glory. The plein air approach was particularly fitting for his endeavor due to Normandy’s associations with the origin of French Impressionism. As Hockney noted, Monet witnessed and recorded 40 springs in nearby Giverny.However, unlike his Impressionist predecessors and in keeping with his long-held embrace of contemporary technology (he has used fax machines, laser photocopiers, and other 20th- and 21st-century digital instruments throughout his six-decade career), Hockney used the medium of the iPad for The Arrival of Spring, Normandy, 2020.
The reviews of "David Hockney: Bigger & Closer," the British artist's entry into the craze for immersive digitally projected art, are mixed.
Durante l'anno scolastico abbiamo osservato molte immagini relative ai paesaggi: foto, immagini pubblicitarie, dipinti, acqueforti e dis...
An exhibition of David Hockney’s works of the past decade is immersive and often mesmerising.
The East Yorkshire Landscape Why go on painting in Yorkshire? Is it possible to do anything new in the landscape genre? Most of the art world thinks it’s not worth doing anymore. In Europe, …
One of England’s most versatile and inventive artists of the postwar era, Hockney became widely known in the 1960s for his vivid landscapes, domestic scenes, and intimate portraits born in California. The Arrival of Spring, Normandy, 2020 marks his third series documenting the blossoming of spring, having done his first in 2011 and the second in 2013. For this latest project, he observed the richness of the season from the bucolic surroundings of rural Normandy. Working en plein air (in the open air), he spent his days scrutinizing and recording the subtle, daily changes in the plants and light as spring emerged and took hold with all its drama and glory. The plein air approach was particularly fitting for his endeavor due to Normandy’s associations with the origin of French Impressionism. As Hockney noted, Monet witnessed and recorded 40 springs in nearby Giverny.However, unlike his Impressionist predecessors and in keeping with his long-held embrace of contemporary technology (he has used fax machines, laser photocopiers, and other 20th- and 21st-century digital instruments throughout his six-decade career), Hockney used the medium of the iPad for The Arrival of Spring, Normandy, 2020.
You won’t need 3D glasses, but you’ll feel like you have them on. The London Times calls his work: “An unqualified, life-enhancing joy…” I went to see this exhibit twice, ac…
Lockdown blossom ... a lavishly illustrated record of the exchanges between the artist, in Normandy, and the critic, in Cambridge, during the past year
David Hockney, Vincent van Gogh, Hockney - Van Gogh, The Joy of Nature, Van Gogh Museum, Popart, Postimpressionisme
An expert guide to David Hockney. Learn about the history of the iconic British artist and discover the many stages of the artist’s versatile style.
Hockney's bright swimming pools, split-level homes, and suburban landscapes are a strange brew of calm and hyperactivity that are a unique addition to Pop art.
We had bought our tickets weeks ago: a good move, since David Hockney’s show, A Bigger Picture, at the Royal Academy is now sold out for its entire run. And show it is: this realisation hit m…
Anybody who caught the David Hockney exhibition A Bigger Picture at the Royal Academy back in 2012 will know that his iPad pictures are full of the sort of joy and energy that we really need right now. So it’s great news that Hockney, who on turning eighty moved to La Grande Cour, a centuries-old farmhouse … Continue reading "Win a copy of David Hockney’s new book"