Why David Hockney's 1967 masterpiece is newly poignant after his death
'The vibrant proof of a presence slipped away': Why David Hockney's 1967 masterpiece is newly poignant after his death
In the wake of legendary British artist David Hockney's death, aged 88, his famous meditation on presence and absence, A Bigger Splash, takes on a new meaning.
Created three years after moving to Los Angeles from London, David Hockney's iconic acrylic painting A Bigger Splash is a study in perception and the fleetingness of being. Since its emergence in 1967, the work has been cherished as a powerful metaphor for liberation and the freedom of personal expression.
At first glance, the painting's abrupt, split-second syncing of exploding pool water and clean summer light may seem a conspicuous heir of the impromptu plein air snapshots of sun and stream that characterised the vision of the Impressionists.
But to understand the carefully calibrated contours of Hockney's canvas, one needs to look further back. Much further. Though the work may chronicle a flashing instant in time, his masterpiece – a fusion of photography and drawing, ancient frescoes and cutting-edge aesthetics – was in fact millennia in the making.
The year before Hockney moved to California, he visited Egypt. There, he was able to study and draw, first hand, tomb art he had first encountered in the British Museum and had been obsessed with as a student. Leaving behind his camera, the young artist focused on translating the flatness of ancient frescoes and the stylised, statuesque figures to his drawing pad.
The crispness and intense immediacy of these Egyptian reliefs seem to have rhymed in his mind with the calm cool colours that he had always admired in the early Renaissance frescoes and tempera panels of artists such as Masaccio, Fra Angelico and Piero della Francesca. Suddenly, the chaotic and cluttered compositions he had been pursuing previously no longer made sense.
After moving to the US, the burgeoning influence of those masters would merge in Hockney's imagination with the bold language of the prevailing contemporary art movement of the time, American Pop Art. What might it mean to combine the commercial punch of Andy Warhol's soup cans or Roy Lichtenstein's comic book "pows!" with the........
