David Hockney:
Picture "Untitled, No. 516, Art Edition D (A Bigger Book)" (2011-2019)
Proportional view
Picture "Untitled, No. 516, Art Edition D (A Bigger Book)" (2011-2019)
David Hockney:
Picture "Untitled, No. 516, Art Edition D (A Bigger Book)" (2011-2019)

Quick info

limited, total 250 copies | numbered | signed | dated | iPad drawing | framed | size 71 x 58 cm

Product no. IN-944773.R1
Picture "Untitled, No. 516, Art Edition D (A Bigger Book)" (2011-2019)
David Hockney: Picture "Untitled, No. 516, Art Edition D...

Detailed description

Picture "Untitled, No. 516, Art Edition D (A Bigger Book)" (2011-2019)

Immediately after waking up, still lying in bed, he artistically captured the first impression of the day with a sensitive eye: The flowers that his partner John Fitzherbert placed fresh on the window sill every two to three days.

He compared iPad painting to watercolour painting - only it is even faster, making it ideal for capturing of spring, the shift in light in an instant: "There is magic in an iPad," said Hockney.

iPad drawing, 2011-2019. Edition: 250 copies on archival paper, numbered, signed and dated. Motif size 44 x 33 cm. Sheet size 56 x 43.5 cm. Size in frame 71 x 58 cm as shown.

About David Hockney

The artist David Hockney (born in 1937 in Bradford, UK) grew up in a working-class family in northern England. The already famous artist came to Los Angeles at the age of 26 and immediately fell in love with the dazzling city. The casualness, the Californian light and the bright colours really inspired him in his work.

Inspired by the never-ending summer on the American West Coast, sunny optimism returned to his previously rather gloomy works and swimming pools became his most important motif. His first "Pool Painting" was created in 1964 after a visit to a wealthy collector. Soon many were to follow and they are still among the artist's most sought-after motifs today. In Hockney's work, the pool subject stands for hedonism, sexual freedom and lust for life. The Briton is one of the most renowned and successful artists worldwide. His works can be found in all important museums of contemporary art. He returned to live and work in England in 2000.

Recommendations