Go See – Humlebæk, Denmark: David Hockney at the Louisiana Museum through August 28th, 2011

August 17th, 2011


David Hockney, composite from “Me Draw on iPad” (2010), all Hockney images are via the Louisiana Museum

On view at Denmark’s Louisiana Museum is “Me Draw on iPad” featuring several hundred of David Hockney’s most recent drawings. Created on his iPhone and iPad using the Brushes application, these drawings make clear both Hockney’s characteristic whimsy and  dedication to exploration of new creative methods and media. Curated by Charlie Scheips, “Me Draw on iPad” is on view through August 28th 2011.


David Hockney, composite from “Me Draw on iPad” (2010)

More text and images after the jump…

Many of the drawings exhibited are of flowers in vases: sunflowers, lilies, white roses… Yet despite similar compositions and the lack of titles, Hockney’s use of vibrant colors and various paintbrush tools makes each image individual, and entire backstories can be imagined from small details. Certain drawings more clearly demonstrate Hockney’s painterly training. The pears in Untitled, 11 January 2011 exhibit chiaroscuro modeling, shaded to appear to be three-dimensional. The composition – a still-life with bowl and fruit – pays homage to the history of painting and the fine arts but in a new, contemporary medium. In fact, his pears are somewhat comparable to the fruit painted by Paul Cezanne in Still Life with a Ginger Jar and Eggplants from 18933-94.


David Hockney, Untitled, 11 January 2011 (2011)


Paul Cezanne, Still Life with Ginger Jar and Eggplants (1893-1894), via The Metropolitan Museum of Art

In a different vein than many of the still-lifes is Hockney’s Untitled 2010. The portrait of a man in a suit with a seemingly old-fashioned collar, his blue eyes stare intensely at the viewer, is rendered almost life-like. Hockney has managed to create a naturalistic skin-tone, blending pinks, whites, and browns to form the face, and although it is evident that the image is not a traditional painting, Hockney has explored the media available with Brushes’ tools to make the image seem almost identical to a work using the more traditional technique of pastels.


David Hockney, Untitled 2010 (2010)

The drawings are displayed on over forty iPads and iPods hung in one gallery- periodically the images shift. In addition, one iPad shows the process of drawing: as colors appear and disappear while the artist hatches, shades, and erases using the various Brushes tools, viewers are given a rare glimpse into Hockney’s every decision and methodology. The exhibition not only pays homage to Hockney’s talents as an artist, but also plays with the potentiality of new media in relation to artistic tradition. “Me Draw on iPad” is on display at the Louisiana Museum in Humlebæk, Denmark through August 28th, 2011.

– G. Linden

Related Links

Exhibition Page [The Louisiana Museum]
David Hockney’s iPad Art
[The Telegraph]
David Hockney’s iPad Doodles Resemble High-Tech Stained Glass
[Bloomberg]
In Paris, A Display from Hockney’s Pixelated Period
[NPR]
David Hockney Turns to Apple’s New iPad as his Instant Art Goes ‘Back to the Future’
[The Daily Mail]