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Lot 76AR

David Hockney
(born 1937)
Self-Portrait

16 December 2021, 14:00 GMT
London, New Bond Street

Sold for £50,250 inc. premium

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David Hockney (born 1937)

Self-Portrait (not in M.C.A. Tokyo)
Etching and aquatint, 1962, on wove paper, an unrecorded proof aside from the only three known impressions, with margins, the sheet irregularly trimmed circa 5cm along upper and lower sheet edges, otherwise in overall good condition

Plate 480 x 262mm. (18 7/8 x 10 1/4in.) Sheet 501 x 343mm. (19 3/4 x 13 1/2in.)

Footnotes

There are only three other known examples of this rare, early etching dating from 1962. One proof is currently located in the collection of the artist, and of the other two that have come up for sale, a second is now owned by the Tate Gallery, London.

The artist made the work in his final year at the Royal College of Art in London. Entitled Self Portrait, the etching humorously dances around themes of erotic desire, the 'real self' vs. 'the ideal self' and Hockney's interest at this time in his own sexuality.

A muscular male nude, that bears little resemblance to Hockney, dominates the image while a much smaller, much less-muscular figure wearing glasses is superimposed over the top. This imagery of the ideal self, exemplified in the muscular nude and the floating classical torso, juxtaposes the skinny figure and the awkward spectacled self-portrait that closely resembles the artist himself.

The self-deprecating depictions, the representations of male sexuality, both classical and modern, and the amusing phallic references (a compositor's stick held by a delicate, gloved hand), were all central themes to Hockney's work in the 1960s.

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