Hockney
plays with perspective in new photos, paintings at LA
exhibit
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[July 20, 2015]
By Piya Sinha-Roy
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
From his classic 1967 Los Angeles pool scene "A Bigger
Splash" to his interpretations of Yorkshire forests,
British artist David Hockney has always injected the
world around him with a vibrant palette, most recently
in a study of perspectives.
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"David Hockney: Painting and Photography," opening this week
at the LA Louver gallery right near California's Venice Beach,
features acrylic paintings and photographs that play with
spatial effects and vanishing points.
"Thirty years ago, I did a Vogue for Paris using these ideas,
but it's only with digits (digital) that you can really take
off, and I only just realized that two years ago," Hockney, 78,
told Reuters.
The 28 works in the collection were done by the artist over the
past two years since he moved back to Los Angeles.
The paintings echo the photographic collages that were created
using software to seamlessly blend hundreds of photos depicting
people mingling and socializing in Hockney's home studio,
surrounded by tables, chairs and his artworks.
Technology has always played a key part in Hockney's works, from
his 1986 "Pearblossom Hwy," a composite shot of a California
highway created using hundreds of photographs of the scene, to a
collection of iPad sketches of Yorkshire's forestry, displayed
in 2012's "A Bigger Picture" exhibit in London.
"The technological change is enormous now, enormous, and people
haven't quite got it yet," he said.
The Yorkshire-born artist, who said he mainly confines himself
to his Hollywood Hills home due to his poor hearing, said he's
still inspired by Los Angeles, a city he first moved to in the
1960s that has influenced his vibrant color palettes.
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"The light here is marvelous, it's a lot better than England," he
said. "I don't go out much but there's a reasonably sophisticated
city down the hill."
Hockney is one of Britain's most influential artists, his works a
hot commodity in the art market. Earlier this month, his "Arranged
Felled Trees" sold for 3.4 million pounds in London.
Hockney said he has found himself working more than ever now,
painting his Los Angeles garden and portraits of people - he has
completed 65 works so far.
"They all sit in the same chair, they all just sit down and I let
them sit down, and they all sit in different ways," he said.
"I've plenty to do working in portraits like this, I could go on for
an awful long time."
(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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