Prolilific, influential, versatile, brilliant, master draftsman, these and hundreds of other congratulations have been heaped on 79-year-old Yorkshire artist David Hockney. Most of his painting life has been spent in Los Angeles except for a short spell in 2004 when he returned to his native rural landscape to experiment with the C21st artist’s materials of film and iPAD for his 2012 exhibition “A bigger Picture”. Recovering from a minor stroke Hockney returned to California and eventually the urban portrait genre that has played such a role in his career. Until October 2016 Hockney has a collection of friends sitting in the Royal Academy, Picadilly. This collective work of 82 portraits is a return to his craftsmanship in colour and portraiture, the intensity of the colour comes from acrylic paint. Each study is an essay of intimate psychological and emotional resonance with the sitter.
Hockney reaffirms the importance of portraiture in this age of the selfie and the celebrity, he says photography is for celebrities, he prefers to paint his friends, not one portrait is a commission, Hockney invited each sitter personally.
Hockney reaffirms the importance of portraiture in this age of the selfie and the celebrity, he says photography is for celebrities, he prefers to paint his friends, not one portrait is a commission, Hockney invited each sitter personally. The paintings are tightly hung with just a small margin between them, it is very intimate. The dimensions