Based on a painting of the same title (coll. Ludwig Múseum, Cologne), Contrejour in the French-style was inspired by a window in the Pavillon de Flore, at the south-west corner of the Louvre. `The first time I went [to the Louvre] I saw this window with the blind pulled down and the formal garden beyond. And I thought, oh it’s marvellous! marvellous! This is a picture in itself’ (The artist, quoted in: Simon Sykes, p. 305). Hockney had relocated to Paris in 1973, a move precipitated by the souring of his relationship with his former lover Peter Schlesinger. While in Paris, Hockney had the opportunity to work with the renowned etcher Aldo Crommelynck, who had collaborated closely with Picasso. `It was thrilling to meet somebody who’d had such direct contact with Picasso and worked with him such a lot. He taught me marvellous technical things about etching’ (The artist, quoted in: Simon Sykes, p. 285). In particular, Crommelynck instructed Hockney in colour etching, using a new method that allowed for greater spontaneity in the creation of the colour plates, the traditional process for which was notoriously technical. While the etching of Contrejour follows the composition of the painting closely, Hockney re-interprets the interior scene with a range of intaglio techniques to create variations of line and texture. The speckled wallpaper, a nod to pointillism, is rendered with sugar-lift; the muted sunlight on the walls of the alcove with soft-ground etching; the golden blind and clipped lawn of the garden with aquatint; and the intricately cross-hatched parquet floor with hard-ground etching.
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In addition to the catalogue description: - the full sheet. - pale toning to the unprinted areas in the garden (as is common with this print). - very pale foxing in the grey hatched areas to the left of the balcony. - a very faint vertical line of toning in the lower margin to the right of the signature. - time staining to the extreme sheet edges. - some scattered pinpoint foxing and very pale backboard staining verso. Otherwise as described and in very good condition. Framed.
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Lot 50Sale 19776
Contrejour in the French StyleDAVID HOCKNEY (b. 1937)Estimate: GBP 50,000 - 70,000
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