Yorkshire may seem worlds away from the sun-drenched poolsides of California where David Hockney found inspiration for the aquamarine-hued works that first brought him international fame in the ’60s and ’70s. But these peaceful, rolling Yorkshire Wolds landscapes have lived in the Bradford-born artist’s imagination since boyhood, sparking years of exciting and intense creativity. His work has made the Yorkshire Wolds famous, as the subject of striking watercolours, richly coloured paintings and vivid iPad drawings.
Born in 1937, Hockney spent his teenage summers working as a farm hand in the fields around Huggate. After graduating from the Royal Academy of Art in 1962 and travelling to the USA, Hockney soon became famous for his pool paintings of California, becoming associated with the Pop Art movement of the time. He returned regularly to Yorkshire in the 1990s to visit his mother, but by the late 90s stayed for longer periods of time to capture the landscapes of his boyhood. Between 2004 and 2013,