Saturday, June 13, 2026

David Hockney / 40 Images That Prove He Was Always a Tastemaker





English Painter David Hockney / Photo by mikel roberts

David Hockney: 40 Images That Prove He Was Always a Tastemaker

BY ANNA CAFOLLA AND ELLIE PITHERS
June 12, 2026


David Hockney was “a proper dandy,” as his friend, Christopher Simon Sykes, once remarked—and the picture of a very English kind of elegance. The revolutionary British artist has passed away aged 88.

Peroxide mop, statement specs, tweed suits and quirky Crocs / David Hockney’s genius for fashion


Trademark accessories … Hockney in 2023. Photograph: Dave Benett/Getty Images


FASHION

Peroxide mop, statement specs, tweed suits and quirky Crocs: David Hockney’s genius for fashion

With his trademark glasses, his bleached hair and a thrillingly haphazard approach to colour, the artist’s signature style evolved and captivated decade after decade


Lauren Cochrane
Friday 12 June 2026

If artist style is now a well-trodden path in fashion, there are some examples that stand out. David Hockney – with his trademark glasses, rugby shirts, trenchcoats and quirks like wearing a pair of yellow Crocs to meet King Charles in 2022 – might have been top of that list.

Obituaries / David Hockney

 



David Hockney working on one of his Woldgate Woods series in east Yorkshire in 2006. Photograph: Jean-Pierre Goncalves/Tate Britain/PA

Obituary

David Hockney obituary

Ceaselessly inventive painter whose best known works were inspired by the light and colour he encountered in 1960s California


Charles Darwent
Friday 12 Jun 2026 13.35

Soon after he moved to Los Angeles in the 1960s, the artist David Hockney was visited by his mother. As they drove back from the airport, far from her native Bradford, she gazed about her in apparent awe at the beauties of sun-kissed southern California. Then, as Hockney was fond of recalling, she turned and said: “I don’t understand it. Such lovely drying weather and no one’s got their washing out.” Mrs Hockney thus joined Mrs Warhol and Alan Bennett’s “Mam” as working-class mothers who delighted in their son’s success without ever quite understanding it.

David Hockney's 5 Most Famous Paintings


David Hockney 
David Hockey / Portrait of an Artist (Pool with Two Figures) New York, 2017

David Hockney's 5 Most Famous Paintings

reviewed by Erin Argun
Last updated23 Dec 2025

David Hockney has become an icon of British art over his illustrious career, combining a range of different styles to produce his bright, colourful paintings and sculptures. The Yorkshire born artist became an emblem of British Pop Art in the 1960s before moving to California in 1964, where the sun-drenched, sexually liberated atmosphere that he encountered transformed both his style and subject matter.

Friday, June 12, 2026

My top 10 by Daniel Kehlmann


Headshot of Daniel Kehlmann

My top 10
Daniel Kehlmann
Author

See the full list

War and Peace (#7)
by Leo Tolstoy
In Search of Lost Time (#5)
by Marcel Proust
Anna Karenina (#6)
by Leo Tolstoy
The Radetzky March
by Joseph Roth
Sorrows of Young Werther
by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Elective Affinities
by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
The Idiot
by Fyodor Dostoevsky
The Magic Mountain (#42)
by Thomas Mann
Simplicissimus
by Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen
10 Ragtime (#90)
by EL Doctorow


THE GUARDIAN





My top 10 by David Nicholls

 

Headshot of David Nicholls


My top 10
David Nicholls
Author

More a list of favourites – there are some scandalous omissions that I know others will pick – and definitely skewed towards the books that I read at an impressionable age, but everything here has engaged, affected and influenced me and I love them all. 
Persuasion (#18)
by Jane Austen
Bleak House (#12)
by Charles Dickens
The Great Gatsby (#11)
by F Scott Fitzgerald
"A book that seems different every time I read it."
The Portrait of a Lady (#21)
by Henry James
Housekeeping (#43)
by Marilynne Robinson
"The most exquisite writing - perfect prose on every page. Absolutely heartbreaking too."
To the Lighthouse (#4)
by Virginia Woolf
Howards End (#60)
by EM Forster
"By no means a perfect novel but still stuffed full of ideas and with such warmth and curiosity and humour."
Sula
by Toni Morrison
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (#31)
by Muriel Spark
10 The Transit of Venus (#53)
by Shirley Hazzard
"All the scale and high emotion of a great 19th century novel, but published in 1980. One of the great endings too - a puzzle that clicks into place and makes you gasp."

THE GUARDIAN