David Hockney: Drawing from Life at The Morgan Library & Museum, October 2, 2020 – May 30, 2021

“David Hockney (b. 1937) is one of the most internationally renowned living artists. The exhibition is the first to focus on his portraits on paper, and one of very few to investigate his drawing practice. Featuring over 100 drawings and prints, it will trace a trajectory from the artist’s early sketches as a student, through his Ingres-like portraits of the 1970s, to his return to the sketchbooks and imaginative iPhone and iPad portraits in the early 2000s.

David Hockney: Drawing from Life is unique in exploring the artist’s drawing practice through a small group of sitters he has depicted repeatedly over the years: his muse and confidante, the designer Celia Birtwell; his mother; his friend and former curator Gregory Evans; master printer Maurice Payne; and the artist himself. Each of these individuals has been important to Hockney. Over time, he has rendered them in different media and forms, ranging from pencil, pen and ink, and pastel drawings to etchings, photo collages, and iPhone and iPad drawings. In revisiting these people over decades, Hockney gives us a singular insight into the evolution of his practice. The Morgan is a fitting venue for this intimate presentation of drawings, which will take place in the museum’s Morgan Stanley East and West Galleries. In 2017, the Morgan acquired Celia, Paris (1969), the first portrait Hockney made of his close friend, the celebrated textile designer Celia Birtwell. The drawing, included in this exhibition, is a superb example of the precise, delicate style of line drawing—indebted to Ingres and Picasso—that Hockney developed in the late 1960s, notably in portraits of friends and family.” — The Morgan Library & Museum

David Hockney, Self Portrait, 1954. Collage on newsprint,
16 1/2 x 11 3/4″. Bradford Museums & Art Galleries, Cartwright Hall
© David Hockney. Photo: Richard Schmidt
David Hockney, The Student: Homage to Picasso, 1973. Etching,
29 3/4″ x 22 1/4″. National Portrait Gallery, London. Purchased, 1979
© David Hockney. Photo: Richard Schmidt
David Hockney, Mother, Paris, 1972. Colored pencil on paper, 17 x 14”.
Collection of The David Hockney Foundation, © David Hockney.
Photo: Richard Schmidt
David Hockney, Study for My Parents and Myself, 1974. Crayon on paper, 14 x 17″. The David
Hockney Foundation © David Hockney. Photo: Richard Schmidt
David Hockney, Mother, Bradford. 19 Feb 1978, 1979. Sepia ink on paper,
14 x 11″. The David Hockney Foundation © David Hockney.
Photo: Richard Schmidt
David Hockney, Gregory, 1978. Colored pencil on paper, 17 x 14″.
The David Hockney Foundation © David Hockney. Photo: Richard Schmidt
David Hockney, Gregory, Los Angeles, March 31st 1982. Composite polaroid,
14 1/2 x 13 1/4″. Collection of the artist© David Hockney. Photo: Richard Schmidt
David Hockney, Celia, Carennac, August 1971. Crayon on paper, 17 x 14″.
The David Hockney Foundation © David Hockney. Photo: Richard Schmidt
David Hockney, Maurice, 1998. Etching, 44 x 30 1/2. The David Hockney
Foundation © David Hockney. Photo: Richard Schmidt
David Hockney, Self Portrait 26th Sept. 1983. Charcoal on paper,
30 x 22 1/2″. The Doris and Donald Fisher Collection at the San Francisco
Museum of Modern Art © David Hockney
David Hockney, Self Portrait with Red Braces, 2003. Watercolor on paper,
24 x 18 1/8″. © David Hockney. Photo: Richard Schmidt
David Hockney, Celia Birtwell, 21 Nov 2019, 2019, Ink on paper, 30 1 x
22 5/8″. Collection of the artist © David Hockney. Photo: Richard Schmidt
David Hockney, No. 1201. March 14, 2012. iPad drawing printed on paper.
Exhibition Proof 37 x 28. The David Hockney Foundation © David Hockney

“The exhibition reveals an intimate side of this internationally known artist. In the self-portraits as in the portraits of his closest friends done over a period of more than fifty years, Hockney uses drawing to explore with honesty and vulnerability the passage of time and the aging process” — Isabelle Dervaux, Acquavella Curator of Modern and Contemporary Drawings

The exhibition is organized by the National Portrait Gallery, London, in collaboration with the artist and the Morgan. The exhibition was curated by Sarah Howgate, Senior Curator of Contemporary Collections at the National Portrait Gallery, London. The exhibition’s co-curator at the Morgan, was Isabelle Dervaux, Acquavella Curator of Modern and Contemporary Drawings.

Images courtesy The Morgan Library & Museum.