Daily Mail

HOCKNEYS THAT SPRING FROM THE SCREEN

Drawn on an iPad, the artist’s lockdown masterpiec­es light up London

- By Robert Hardman

While others were hunkering down at the start of this pandemic, stockpilin­g loo roll and binge-watching hours of TV rubbish, our most successful living artist had other ideas. in all weathers, at all hours — at the age of 82 — David hockney was out in his garden capturing the micro-mayhem of spring breaking out across four acres of Normandy countrysid­e. The result is 116 ‘paintings’, composed entirely on an iPad during 95 days of lockdown.

And later this month, the public will be able to immerse themselves in hockney’s latest embodiment of his unofficial motto: ‘love life’, at london’s Royal Academy of Arts.

The series is called ‘The Arrival Of Spring, Normandy, 2020’. This is just as well, since it is probably the closest many of us will get to the land of Camembert and Calvados this summer (let alone the rest of France, unless it finds itself on the travel green list).

There is something uplifting about this workaholic Yorkshirem­an’s portrayal of things bursting in to life in the grounds of Chateau hockney. it is, in fact, a halftimber­ed Norman farmhouse which looks as if it might date back to the Conqueror. Neither humans nor before animals feature in the studies.

coronaviru­s brought the world to a halt, hockney (now 83) and his assistant Jeanpierre had been looking for a place to rent in Normandy until he was advised that he might not be able to smoke inside a rented property.

As one of the tobacco industry’s greatest enthusiast­s, hockney was not having that. So he decided to buy this place instead (having set a world record for a living artist when his 1972 Portrait Of An Artist fetched £ 70 million at auction, hockney is not without means).

he calls it his ‘Seven Dwarfs house’ and has spent what he has described as a thoroughly civilised lockdown there, pottering around with his iPad, easel and dog Ruby.

hockney is famous for swapping the grimy monochrome of post-war Bradford for the sunshine and colour of 1960s California. But, having decided that he wanted to capture the full span of spring, he opted to base himself in europe. As he points out, the seasonal changes are so much more pronounced here than in California, where it simply goes from warm to hot.

So we see one of his first subjects, a cherry tree, standing leafless against a February sky. But soon life starts to sprout. One ‘painting’ offers an ant’s- eye view of some imperious daffodils. Another marks the first break-out of blossom from a pear tree with a treehouse.

Purists will quibble that this is not real ‘ painting’ but, no doubt, leonardo da Vinci might have said the same about acrylic. hockney has always acknowledg­ed that this is a different medium.

But he says that the joy of the iPad is the ability to work extremely fast, without all the clutter of the convention­al artist. There’s no need to wait for each layer to dry.

in the book which accompanie­s this show — introduced by William Boyd — hockney also says that he had never intended to paint many of the nocturnal scenes. Then, he says: ‘i just got up to pee, saw the moon and thought, “i’ll just draw this now”. And because it’s an iPad, you can just draw as you are.’

he has even worked with a mathematic­ian and software specialist­s to fine-tune the medium, not to mention tiny variations in every shade of green and blue. Some of the most exuberant trees and hedges are, on closer inspection, thousands of dots. All the works have been printed on to paper. With no frames and no names (every work is, simply, a number), the overall effect is to give a raw vitality to the exhibition.

The ‘paintings’ are arranged in a rough chronologi­cal order. Towards the end, we see summer breaking out and verdant branches set against a field of corn. it could almost be a nod to a treescape by another artist who escaped to the warm French countrysid­e, Vincent van Gogh. here, too, are water lilies, inviting comparison­s with Claude Monet, who spent years painting his lily ponds at nearby Giverny.

how long hockney’s neighbours will put up with him is another matter. This week he said that the land of Monet, Cezanne and Matisse is no longer capable of producing a decent work of art. ‘i’m teaching the French how to paint Normandy,’ he told the Guardian. ‘They gave up painting, didn’t they?’ You can take the lad out of Yorkshire… n DaviD Hockney: The arrival of Spring, normandy, 2020, is at the Royal academy of arts from May 23 to august 1, then august 11 to September 26 (royalacade­my.org.uk, 020 7300 8090).

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? First blossom: Treehouse framed against a sapphire sky
First blossom: Treehouse framed against a sapphire sky
 ??  ?? Exuberant life: A kaleidosco­pe of spring colours
Exuberant life: A kaleidosco­pe of spring colours
 ??  ?? Verdant scene: A tree-filled landscape and, top, Hockney’s house
Verdant scene: A tree-filled landscape and, top, Hockney’s house
 ??  ?? An ant’s-eye view: The painter’s imperious daffodils
An ant’s-eye view: The painter’s imperious daffodils
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