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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Martin Gayford , David HockneyPublisher: Thames & Hudson Ltd Imprint: Thames & Hudson Ltd Weight: 0.800kg ISBN: 9780500094365ISBN 10: 0500094365 Pages: 280 Publication Date: 25 March 2021 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1 An unexpected move 2 Studio work 3 La vie française: French life in a Bohemian style 4 Lines and time 5 A merry Christmas and an unexpected New Year 6 Locked down in paradise 7 A house for an artist and a painter’s garden 8 The sky, the sky! 9 Sumptuous blacks and subtler greens 10 Several smaller splashes 11 Everything flows 12 Rippling lines and musical spaces 13 Lost (and found) in translation 14 Picasso, Proust, and pictures 15 Being somewhere 16 Full moon in NormandyReviews'Optimistic ... demonstrate[s] the artist's constant fascination with the world around him' - The Arts Society 'Optimistic ... demonstrate[s] the artist's constant fascination with the world around him' - The Arts Society 'Lavishly illustrated... Gayford is a thoughtfully attentive critic with a capacious frame of reference' - Guardian 'Designed to underscore [Hockney's] original message of hope, and to further explore how art can gladden and invigorate ... meanders amiably from Rembrandt, to the pleasure principle, andouillette sausages and, naturally, to spring' - Daily Telegraph 'Gloriously illustrated ... It's a book about many things - Hockney's love of France and French painting, his reflections on many other artists among them. But at its heart is this octogenarian's adoration of nature, his belief that art is rooted in love, and a restless gusto for life' - Andrew Marr, The Spectator 'Peppered with his colourful work and insightful conversations with art critic Martin Gayford, this book shows that, though the pandemic cancelled many things, spring cannot be stopped - and neither can David Hockney' - Daily Mail 'A warm and candid peek into Hockney's thought process and the friends' relationship, visually peppered with hundreds of images... Overall the book acts as Hockney's manifesto for how a reconnection with art and nature could get society through much of its tribulations' - It's Nice That 'A series of conversations punctuated with pictures that you can dip into as you please. There are fascinating discursions about studios, about line, about art outbidding photography, about colour - he's interesting on the varieties of black, for instance. Gayford talks about Hockney turning up the colour dial in his works during his career; right now, it's high volume' - Evening Standard 'Beautifully written. Just the tonic for the lockdown blues' - Jessica Fahy, RTE Arena radio 'Hockney and Gayford ... make a good double act: Hockney's questing vision, Gayford's clear-eyed prose. They share an irrepressible interest in just about everything ... This book is not so much a celebration of spring as a springboard for ideas about art, space, time and light ... scholarly, thoughtful and provoking' - The Times 'Hockney and Gayford's exchanges are infused with their deep knowledge of the history of art ... This is a charming book, and ideal for lockdown because it teaches you to look harder at the things around you' - Lynn Barber, The Spectator 'A burst of springtime joy ... delightfully unfocused, a wide-ranging ramble through art, history, culture and food' - Daily Telegraph 'A highly personal and engaging insight into the latest stage of Hockney's life and work' - The Art Newspaper 'What emerges from the writing, snippets and sketches is a manifesto of sorts: a paean to the promise of art and the capacity of nature to heal, renew and offer answers in difficult times... The subjects on every page burst forth like spring bulbs, covering everything from the sight of raindrops on a pond to the work of great artists and the rhythm of daily life' - Monocle Weekend 'Ranging across subjects, from colour and perspective, to sunsets, fame and the effects of aging, the book amounts in the end to something between a memoir and a collection of musings from a man who thinks deeply and widely, and communicates with ease. Whether he is talking about drawing, or Proust or Wagner, Gayford writes that it is with such simplicity and ease that almost everything he says, journalistically speaking, is highly quotable' - The New European 'Hockney's amanuensis provides the framework and armature for Hockney's discussion of his own painting ... In these trying times, Hockney, in recharging his own art in such persuasive ways, conveys somehow a belief in the power of hope and the inevitability of recovery' - Artlyst 'Lushly illustrated ... the talk flows effortlessly. The conversations take in everything from Hockney's fondness for tripe and cigarettes, and Van Gogh and Monet, to music and iPad pictures. Hockney is always interesting on art, possibly because he is both unusually thoughtful and exceptionally lucid, so the chats, seamlessly directed by Gayford, are full of fascinating detail about a range of painters rather than just this displaced Yorkshireman' - New Statesman 'Reveals - and this lies behind the pictures and their apparently effortless clarity - Hockney as the broad-ranging intellectual ... When Hockney talks, for example, of his admiration for Ad Reinhardt's blacks in the same breath as Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales and his own 1981 Metropolitan Opera designs for The Nightingale, you understand the Moon pictures as enchanted stage-sets informed by modern abstraction' - Financial Times 'Gayford records what the artist saw, thought, read, remembered, during lockdown in his French cottage, as reported by email and phone; their conversations read easily and optimistically, spanning nature, food, art, opera, fairy tales' - Jackie Wullschlager, Financial Times 'Optimistic ... demonstrate[s] the artist's constant fascination with the world around him' - The Arts Society 'Lavishly illustrated... Gayford is a thoughtfully attentive critic with a capacious frame of reference' - Guardian 'Designed to underscore [Hockney's] original message of hope, and to further explore how art can gladden and invigorate ... meanders amiably from Rembrandt, to the pleasure principle, andouillette sausages and, naturally, to spring' - Daily Telegraph 'Gloriously illustrated ... It's a book about many things - Hockney's love of France and French painting, his reflections on many other artists among them. But at its heart is this octogenarian's adoration of nature, his belief that art is rooted in love, and a restless gusto for life' - Andrew Marr, The Spectator 'Peppered with his colourful work and insightful conversations with art critic Martin Gayford, this book shows that, though the pandemic cancelled many things, spring cannot be stopped - and neither can David Hockney' - Daily Mail 'A warm and candid peek into Hockney's thought process and the friends' relationship, visually peppered with hundreds of images... Overall the book acts as Hockney's manifesto for how a reconnection with art and nature could get society through much of its tribulations' - It's Nice That 'A series of conversations punctuated with pictures that you can dip into as you please. There are fascinating discursions about studios, about line, about art outbidding photography, about colour - he's interesting on the varieties of black, for instance. Gayford talks about Hockney turning up the colour dial in his works during his career; right now, it's high volume' - Evening Standard 'Beautifully written. Just the tonic for the lockdown blues' - Jessica Fahy, RTE Arena radio 'Hockney and Gayford ... make a good double act: Hockney's questing vision, Gayford's clear-eyed prose. They share an irrepressible interest in just about everything ... This book is not so much a celebration of spring as a springboard for ideas about art, space, time and light ... scholarly, thoughtful and provoking' - The Times 'Hockney and Gayford's exchanges are infused with their deep knowledge of the history of art ... This is a charming book, and ideal for lockdown because it teaches you to look harder at the things around you' - Lynn Barber, The Spectator 'A burst of springtime joy ... delightfully unfocused, a wide-ranging ramble through art, history, culture and food' - Daily Telegraph Author InformationDavid Hockney is perhaps the most critically acclaimed artist of our age. He has produced work in almost every medium and has stretched the boundaries of all of them. His bestselling Secret Knowledge: Rediscovering the lost techniques of the Old Masters is also published by Thames & Hudson, as are his previous books in partnership with Martin Gayford: A Bigger Message and A History of Pictures. Martin Gayford is art critic for the Spectator. His books include Modernists & Mavericks, Man with a Blue Scarf, A Bigger Message, Rendez-vous with Art (with Philippe de Montebello), A History of Pictures (with David Hockney), and, most recently, The Pursuit of Art, all published by Thames & Hudson. 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