David Hockney (1937–2026): Pools, Landscapes, Perspective

David Hockney by Catherine Opie | National Portrait Gallery | Zarastro Art
Catherine Opie, David (2017). Source: National Portrait Gallery

David Hockney, pioneering British artist, has died aged 88, closing a six-decade career that reshaped painting, photography, and stage design. From California swimming pools to Yorkshire landscapes, he redefined perspective, embraced technology, and created instantly recognisable works that fused intimacy, colour, and innovation across media.

He died on 11 June 2026, at home, according to his representatives. They described a life driven by enthusiasm, curiosity, and his recurring phrase, Love Life. Tributes from cultural and political figures followed quickly.

Born in Bradford in 1937, Hockney grew up in a working-class family where drawing and discipline were central. He studied at Bradford College of Art and later at the Royal College of Art in London. From the outset, he resisted institutional expectations, establishing himself as both prodigy and outsider.

His move to Los Angeles in the 1960s defined his public image. There, he produced sunlit pool paintings that captured leisure, desire, and architectural clarity. Works such as A Bigger Splash became central to his reputation. He also began dismantling conventional single-point perspective, replacing it with shifting, multiple viewpoints.

Photography became a parallel language in his practice. From Polaroid collages to later photographic joiners, he built images from fragments and angles rather than fixed positions. He moved easily between media, incorporating photocopiers, fax machines, and eventually the iPad, which gave him a direct, immediate drawing tool. Alongside this, he sustained a long engagement with opera and theatre design.

In later life, he returned to Yorkshire and later lived in Normandy, continuing to paint landscapes while expanding his use of digital tools. Large immersive installations opened his work to new formats, while major retrospectives in London and Paris reaffirmed his standing in postwar art.

Across six decades, his work was defined by reinvention without rupture. He moved between portraiture, landscape, and stage environments, consistently testing how perspective could be rethought through lived perception rather than fixed rules.

He treated every medium as a way of seeing rather than a technical novelty. Paint, Polaroids, photocopiers, and tablets all served the same purpose in his hands. While critics sometimes questioned these shifts, his visual language remained consistent and immediately identifiable.

Public engagement with his work expanded steadily, culminating in major international exhibitions that drew large audiences. His pool paintings and Yorkshire landscapes entered wider visual culture, shaping how places such as Los Angeles and rural England are now commonly imagined.

Following his death, tributes emphasised his generosity, humour, and relentless curiosity. He was widely described as someone who changed how people look, not only what they look at.

His influence endures in how images are approached. He insisted that seeing is active, unstable, and constructed through attention, a position that continues to shape visual culture beyond his work.

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