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David Hockney, 25th June 2022, Looking at the Flowers (Framed) , 2022
David Hockney, 25th June 2022, Looking at the Flowers (Framed) , 2022

David Hockney British, b. 1937

25th June 2022, Looking at the Flowers (Framed) , 2022
Photographic drawing printed on five sheets of paper, mounted on five sheets of Dibond
300 x 518 cm
edition of 15

Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) David Hockney, 25th June 2022, Looking at the Flowers (Framed) , 2022
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) David Hockney, 25th June 2022, Looking at the Flowers (Framed) , 2022
Within the composition, Hockney is depicted twice - once on the right side of the scene, and once on the left - sitting in an armchair and looking upon his twenty flower still lifes displayed salon-style on a navy-blue wall. "This is photographic but is in no way an ordinary photograph," Hockney describes. "I had been doing what I called photographic drawings, giving a much more 3D effect. This is because you have to look at these through time (unlike an ordinary photograph which you see all at once)." From a series of individual photographs, Hockney constructs a seamless panorama that defies the natural parameters of time and space. The photographic drawing pulls viewers into a self-referential world that is at once familiar and entirely new. "Most people thought the photograph was the ultimate depiction of reality, didn't they? People thought, This is it, this is the end of it. Which it's not. And I'm very certain it's not, but not many people think the way I do." Françoise Mouly, "David Hockney Rediscovers Painting," The New Yorker, February 17, 2022.
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Within the composition, Hockney is depicted twice - once on the right side of the scene, and once on the left - sitting in an armchair and looking upon his twenty flower still lifes displayed salon-style on a navy-blue wall. "This is photographic but is in no way an ordinary photograph," Hockney describes. "I had been doing what I called photographic drawings, giving a much more 3D effect. This is because you have to look at these through time (unlike an ordinary photograph which you see all at once)." From a series of individual photographs, Hockney constructs a seamless panorama that defies the natural parameters of time and space. The photographic drawing pulls viewers into a self-referential world that is at once familiar and entirely new. "Most people thought the photograph was the ultimate depiction of reality, didn't they? People thought, This is it, this is the end of it. Which it's not. And I'm very certain it's not, but not many people think the way I do." Françoise Mouly, "David Hockney Rediscovers Painting," The New Yorker, February 17, 2022.
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