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In “David Hockney,” the artist’s work jumps off the page, pulsing with life. A retrospective and a book capture his vitality and inventiveness.
David Hockney is known the world over for making big splashes. Still at it after seven decades, Hockney’s popularity is in no danger of waning anytime soon. He placed third on the Artnet ...
David Hockney’s home studio is set deep in the Hollywood Hills. We drive there from Sunset Boulevard, past sweeping views of the canyon below, 1920s Art Deco homes and modernist glass boxes ...
Artist David Hockney was a driver: After visiting and then moving to Los Angeles in 1964, he'd zip around the Hollywood Hills in his red 450 SL Mercedes, perhaps to Chateau Marmont, his spot in ...
Jeff Goldblum’s eldest son has officially turned 10! Goldblum shares Charlie Ocean Goldblum and River Joe Goldblum, with his ...
From 2013 to 2016, iconic L.A. artist David Hockney painted portraits of 82 people in his orbit. They all sat for roughly 20 hours over the course of two or three days in the same yellow chair in ...
David Hockney: 82 Portraits and 1 Still-life When: Opens at 10 a.m. Sunday, April 15 and runs through July 29. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Fridays and 10 a ...
Hockney’s sister describes their mother in the documentary "David Hockney: A Bigger Picture": “She was a very great power. She had a very great emotional power that’s a bit hard to describe.
“David likes to look forward, not backward,” observes Scheips, a former Hockney assistant. “He has this amazing knack to see a potential in something and make it Hockney-esque.” ...
NEW YORK — The David Hockney retrospective at the Metropolitan Museum of Art is one of the delights of the season. Room after room unfolds a sense of his seemingly limitless visual talent, his ...
Bruno Wollheim’s David Hockney: A Bigger Picture is a much more straightforward account than Jack Hazan’s 1974 movie A Bigger Splash. It brings Hockney’s life full circle — the earlier ...
Hockney’s sister describes their mother in the documentary "David Hockney: A Bigger Picture": “She was a very great power. She had a very great emotional power that’s a bit hard to describe.