View allAll Photos Tagged davidhockney
I have a large(ish) collection of art books from the last 20 years or so - these are amongst my favourite ones.
The Magazine at the top in the middle is Modern Painters from 1989 - it's heyday for me edited by Peter Fuller. I'm living in the wrong era!
I'm waiting for Roger Hilton's 'Late works and night letters' to come out in paperback, my next purchase.
1983. Collage fotogràfic sobre cartolina. 147,3 x 189,2 cm. Venut per Sotheby's el 2022. (44.00 USD)
Photos Taken in Salts Mill, Bradford. Pentax K5 ii & Pentax kit lens. The B&W photos were inspired by "Ian Beesley" a Bradford Social documentary photographer, and of course some inspired by my favourite Artist, "David Hockney".
View the stages I went through in my latest blog:
whetnallwatercolours.blogspot.com/2012/01/new-year-new-ca...
David Hockney was born on July 9, 1937, in Bradford, England, to Laura and Kenneth Hockney. The Hockneys were, as David said, a radical working-class family. Laura and Kenneth were solid parents who only wanted their children to have the best education possible. Laura raised her children as strict Methodists and resolutely shunned smoking and drinking in the home. Kenneth was a passionate radical and a conscientious objector during World War I. David Hockney was always considered an eccentric in Bradford. He never really cared what people thought of him and always did as he pleased. He spent afternoons at Sunday School drawing cartoons of Jesus, much to his teachers' dismay.
[Lithograph, 105.5 x 75 cm]
gandalfsgalleymodern.blogspot.com/2011/06/david-hockney-h...
A composite image of seven photos taken from the same spot, each using a different film camera. The individual photos have been collaged in photoshop. In this case the cameras were: Minolta Dynax 5 (with Pink-o-Chrome film), Olympus XA3 (with redscale film), Exakta VX1000 (with 135mm lens), Nikon Nuvis 75 (2 photos), Lomo LC-Wide and Ricoh R1.
pain
process
pandemic
moments of friction
better than nothing
'like a ferret'
Created in an altered version of Spring Cannot Be Cancelled by Martin Gayford and David Hockney
Back home from the exhibition, feet up with mister and mister Hockney
#thearrivalofspring #vangoghmuseum #vangoghmuseumamsterdam #davidhockney
#davidsockknee
Photos Taken in Salts Mill, Bradford. Pentax K5 ii & Pentax kit lens. The B&W photos were inspired by "Ian Beesley" a Bradford Social documentary photographer, and of course some inspired by my favourite Artist, "David Hockney".
A Hockney-style portrait of my younger brother.
I need to fix the exposure of this bottom-left picture.
And I was a little in a hurry, not all of them are tad sharp.
Joiner photograph / photo collage inspired by the work of David Hockney, of course. It is made from 67 single photos taken with a smartphone over the course of three months. Can you spot the different timelines in this picture?
Jaren terug vond ik dit boekje bij het vuil. Nu opnieuw ontdekt in mijn boekenkast. Wat zouden de raadselachtige notities betekenen ? En wie heeft dit gedaan ?
Celia, 8365 Melrose Ave., Hollywood, 1973. Lithograph. Gemini GEL. Anderson Collection. de Young Museum
Photos Taken in Salts Mill, Bradford. Pentax K5 ii & Pentax kit lens. The B&W photos were inspired by "Ian Beesley" a Bradford Social documentary photographer, and of course some inspired by my favourite Artist, "David Hockney".
This altered book was created in Spring Cannot be Cancelled by Martin Gayford and David Hockney. Text and images from the book were used in many of the blackout poems and visual spreads. Working on individual pages was like reading the book at a very slow pace, and I gained a much greater appreciation for it!
Media: mixed media on paper
created in journaling class sessions winter 22 and spring 22
Photos Taken in Salts Mill, Bradford. Pentax K5 ii & Pentax kit lens. The B&W photos were inspired by "Ian Beesley" a Bradford Social documentary photographer, and of course some inspired by my favourite Artist, "David Hockney".
Photos Taken in Salts Mill, Bradford. Pentax K5 ii & Pentax kit lens. The B&W photos were inspired by "Ian Beesley" a Bradford Social documentary photographer, and of course some inspired by my favourite Artist, "David Hockney".
Piccadilly Circus station has recently been 'adorned' by this new 'artwork' by no less than David Hockney. Its on an electronic display on one landing. The same image is also displayed going up one escalator shaft, but alternating with adverts.
I do recall how Mr Hockney used to work in the old fashioned medium of oil paint. He managed to produce a number of paintings that are definitely recognisible as 'art'. I'm not sure what this is, though at least he apparently wasn't paid for it!
At least one person likes it: www.creativebloq.com/news/hockneys-london-artwork
And the Mayor thinks its 'brilliant' - though possibly he used to say that when his children came home from school with something similar....
poem text:
strange
to lose
the soul
only
to find
the sole
world
[laughs]
a mad world
text source: altered version of Spring Cannot Be Cancelled by Martin Gayford and David Hockney
E012_008b
29/01/2023 : Aix-en-Provence, place Saint-Jean-de-Malte, musée Granet : exposition David Hockney, collection de la Tate (du 28 janvier au 28 mai 2023)
In the Studio, December 2017 (dessin photographique imprimé sur 7 feuilles de papier, monté sur Dibond, 278 x 760 cm, assisté de Jonathan Wilkinson, 2017)