
1970
Renowned English painter, David Hockney, takes us on a visual journey as he shares with us his treasured photo diaries. Consisting of polaroids Hockney has been collecting since 1967, the diaries act as both a tribute and an artist's notebook, often times including images the painter used for his large canvas works. A fine example of Hockney's pictorial inspiration are several photographs of castles he took during a boat trip down the Rhine that were later adapted for a suite of etchings to accompany six Grimm's fairy tales. Seeing his projects long before the work begins, Hockney used his camera to slow time and capture images that would go on to boast his unique style of realism. In David Hockney's Diaries the artist is seen at work on a large canvas of his friends Celia and Ossie Clark and their cat Percy, commissioned by the Tate Gallery.

David Hockney
Himself

Terenci: la fabulación infinita

The Polymath, or The Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman

Love, Cecil

Make Me Famous

The Capote Tapes

Are We Going Backward?

A Brief History of Seven Killings Marlon James

Boom for Real: The Late Teenage Years of Jean-Michel Basquiat

Hockney

Derren Brown: The Devil's Picturebook

The Source

Omar and Cedric: If This Ever Gets Weird

Miss Rosewood

McKellen: Playing the Part

Little Richard: I Am Everything

Danny Says

Toute la vérité, rien que la vérité : Jean Cocteau

Fassbinder

General Idea: Art, AIDS and the fin de siècle

Keith Haring: Street Art Boy