1967
Here is a typical afternoon on a California residence. A water sprinkler is moving on a wide stretch of deserted green lawn. Hockney, who moved to Los Angeles from England in 1964, often painted sun-splashed scenes from ordinary American middle-class life. The flat and clear picture with little shading is created by a new technique employing acrylic colors. The simple composition that is almost geometric in nature is divided into bright blue and green color fields, with the whole picture framed with a band of clear red. The artist himself has described this work to be almost a symmetrical abstract piece, but the water spraying from the nozzles breaks the regularity. Hockney has repeatedly painted pool surface reflecting sunlight and splashes of water. In these paintings, he contrasts water, with its amorphousness, with the solid and geometric composition, creating an expression which vacillates between reality and stylized pattern. The impression is similar at first glance to the straightforward reality presented in the contemporary works of Pop Art, but the world Hockney creates is very different in that it has a unique immateriality of a daydream.
1974
1976-77
1971
1976-77
1980
1979
1978
1976-77
1980
1984
KIWAMURA Sojiro
1967
KATO Toichi
1967
NAKAJIMA Kiyoshi
1967
HIRATA Minoru
1967(プリント2011)
MINAGAWA Gekka
1967
IDA Shoichi
1967
KOMAI Tetsuro
1967
KIWAMURA Sojiro
1967
ARAKI Tetsuo
1967
ODA Jo
1967