| David
Hockney (British, 1937 - )
One of the foremost painters,
designers, and photographers of the 20th-century contemporary
art scene in the United States and England, David Hockney was
born in Bradford, Yorkshire, England. He experimented with numerous
styles including that of Italian master, Peiro della Francesca,
and Hockney became one of the most important portraitists of
his era, renowned for depictions of family and people he met
in his extensive travels.
He studied at Bradford College of Art in 1957 and in 1962 at
the Royal College of Art. In the 1960s, much of his work was
a homage to his heroes that included Picasso, Dubuffet, and
Matisse combined with the influence of Abstract Expressionism.
In the mid 1970s, he spent three years in Paris and then traveled
to Los Angeles where he did a series of lithographs and also
did his first opera design, which was for Stravinsky's "The
Rake's Progress." In 1988, the University of Aberdeen,
Scotland, awarded him an honorary doctorate.
One of his closest friends in New York City was curator and
leading art commentator, Henry Gedzhaler, with whom he traveled
extensively in the 1970s and 1980s. Hockney did numerous paintings,
lithographs and drawings that included Gedzhaler.
He has had numerous one-man shows including at the Kasmin Gallery,
1963-1989; in New York at the Museum of Modern Art in 1964 and
the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1988; the Stedelijk Museum
in Amsterdam, Holland in 1966; and the Tate Gallery in London
in 1988. He has also been a stage set designer for the Metropolitan
Opera in New York City.
Hockney has lectured at universities including the University
of Iowa in 1964, the University of Colorado in 1965, the University
of California in Los Angeles in 1966, and the University of
California-Berkeley in 1967.
In 1998, he did a series of vivid pastels on the Grand Canyon
called "David Hockney: Space & Line," that were
exhibited in Paris at Centre George Pompidou from January 27
to April 26th, 1999, and following that for a month at the Richard
Gray Gallery in New York City.
The paintings are large-scale, impressionist close-ups of the
Canyon in the morning light. In 1999, he won the Wollaston award
for some of his Canyon paintings, which were exhibited at London's
Royal Academy.
In 2001, Hockney's book "Secret Knowledge" was published
by Viking Press and stirred much discussion with his assertion
that many of the Old Masters including Vermeer, Rembrandt, and
Durer frequently used optical devices to achieve their near
perfect realism. His theory is that the mirror, the camera obscura,
and the camera lucida were widely used by artists as early as
the 1400s and that the introduction of photography in the 19th
century freed artists from realism.
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