Breaking: David Hockney

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by Norrette Moore

Sad. He lived a long life which is all you can ask for. I’ve always loved his art and love going to  Saltaire Mill which has a lot of his prints.

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by Marjorie Firth

I visited Saltaire & the mill about 20 years ago, took a day out when on holiday with friends in the Howarth area.  It's an interesting town as well.

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by Norrette Moore

I put this comment on the Guardian's comment page - may as well share it here rather than writing the same thing in different words... Well, I knew it had to happen - he fought back from a stroke a few years ago, but physically had been on a long decline; as an artist however, he could still surprise you (and how he revelled in it, quietly chuckling away as he took a long drag on a cigarette). What I valued about him was that he was never obedient - to rules of painting, societal expectations, received opinion; but he didn't break rules just for the sake of breaking them: he was never so predictable. Though he used modern methods and equipment, he still valued traditional techniques, as witness his comment that acrylic paint is often at its best when used for glazing, the application of transparent colours over opacity - an ancient technique, one facilitated by the fast-drying medium.  I don't know that his views on the camera obscura really add up, particularly when applied to Vermeer - but his pursuit of that opinion indicated his endless curiosity; and his courage in expressing it. I'm not sure that the book on which he collaborated added much to art history, since by definition its claims could not be proved. The point is, though, that in the end it doesn't matter - artists use tools of all kinds, are fully entitled to, and always have - the point lies in what they do with them; and as he tried everything he could lay hands on, he would have scorned the idea that some expressed at the time that this would have been "cheating", or that it in any way detracted from the reputation of artists who may have benefited from extraneous aids.
Well said, Robert. How do you get paragraph spacing to work on the Guardian comments? (Ah, the spaces appear afterwards)

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by Norrette Moore

Nicely summed up Robert, hopefully the editor will publish it. I can’t add anything, just to say that his working day (even recently), would put most of us to shame… certainly myself anyway!
It's up there, Alan.  Under the Jonathan Jones Obit of Hockney.
Sad news indeed. What a career and one that will be talked about for many generations. He pushed the boundaries and embraced new technology incorporating it into his art. Certainly one of a kind and top of his game.
Many years ago I learnt that the mind uses the brain. Through much deep thinking that statement set me off onto a completely new path. So live on David Hockney, the champion of British Art. Well put Robert, well commented, thank you.