David Hockney - Evening & Day Editions London Wednesday, January 18, 2023 | Phillips

Create your first list.

Select an existing list or create a new list to share and manage lots you follow.

  • “These two dear little creatures are my friends. They are intelligent, loving, comical and often bored. They watch me work; I notice the warm shapes they make together, their sadness and their delights. And, being Hollywood dogs, they somehow seem to know that a picture is being made”
    —David Hockney

    Comprised of fifteen etchings, David Hockney’s Dog Wall is a large-scale homage to his two beloved dachshunds: Stanley and Little Boodgie. Depicted lounging in a variety of positions – sometimes together, sometimes individually – Dog Wall attests to the artist’s adoration of his pets while simultaneously exemplifying the brilliance of his draughtsmanship.

     

    Realised in 1998, the Dog Wall portfolio was produced soon after Hockney’s close friend and master printer Maurice Payne moved into the artist’s Los Angeles home for a year. In Hockney’s Montcalm Avenue residence, Payne set up a fully-functioning etching studio. He took to leaving prepared etching plates all around Hockney’s house, which the artist would then spontaneously use as he might a sketchbook. This sense of freedom is exhibited in every individual charming etching that comprises Dog Wall, with each print serving as a quick study of the dachshunds. Captured at speed - before the dogs darted off again – Hockney uses variations in line to depict the pair as rapidly yet realistically as possible. In some prints, delicately and sporadically placed lines conjure up the face of an animal at rest, with the negative space of the unmarked surface acting as an oasis of stillness. In other etchings, densely packed lines overlap into pulsating balls of energy, adding a vitality to the prints and conveying the lively personalities of Stanley and Little Boodgie, even in the brief moments of calm that Hockney sought to capture. Serving as a composite portrait of his two pets, Dog Wall is an exquisite study in mark making executed entirely in monochrome.

     

    177415_FIG 1 (left): David Hockney, Dog Etching No. 11, from Dog Wall, 1998  177415_FIG 2 (right): David Hockney, Dog Etching No. 1, from Dog Wall, 1998
    Left: David Hockney, Dog Etching No. 11, from Dog Wall, 1998 
    Right: David Hockney, Dog Etching No. 1, from Dog Wall, 1998 


    “They sleep with me; I’m always with them. They don’t go anywhere without me and only occasionally do I leave them. They’re like little people to me”
    —David Hockney

    (left): David Hockney, 1992. Image: Science History Images / Alamy Stock Photo (right): David Hockney with his Dachshund. Image: Science History Images / Alamy
    Left: David Hockney, 1992. Image: Science History Images / Alamy Stock Photo
    Right: David Hockney with his Dachshund. Image: Science History Images / Alamy Stock Photo 

    Hockney’s love for sausage dogs was sparked by Heinz, the cherished dachshund of his close friend Ian Falconer. Upon seeing how besotted Hockney was with Heinz, Falconer took the artist to pick out Stanley at the breeders, with Little Boodgie joining the Hockney household a few years later. Hockney credits his canine companions with helping him through a very difficult time in his life. Having lost many friends in the 1980s and early 1990s to AIDS, Hockney was particularly affected when revered art historian and close friend Henry Geldzahler succumbed to liver cancer in 1994. Stanley and Little Boodgie proved essential to helping Hockney through his grief and were first immortalised in 1995 in a series of paintings titled Dog Days. Hockney’s repeated meditations on his two dachshunds epitomise his devotion to the dogs, with Dog Wall serving as the most refined, multi-faceted representation of their individual personalities. Hockney’s depictions of Stanley and Little Boodgie are in good art historical company, as both Pablo Picasso and Andy Warhol also immortalised their pet dachshunds – called Lump and Archie respectively – through their artworks.

    • Provenance

      Christie's, New York, Prints and Multiples, 1 Nov 2005, lot 414
      Acquired from the above sale by the present owner

    • Artist Biography

      David Hockney

      David Hockney (b. 1937) is one of the most well-known and celebrated artists of the
      20th and 21st centuries. He works across many mediums, including painting, collage,
      and more recently digitally, by creating print series on iPads. His works show semi-
      abstract representations of domestic life, human relationships, floral, fauna, and the
      changing of seasons.

      Hockney has exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Royal
      Academy of Arts in London, and the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, among many
      other institutions. On the secondary market, his work has sold for more than $90
      million.

       
      View More Works

Property of a Private UK Collector

29

Dog Wall

1998
The complete set of 15 etchings, on Somerset paper, with full margins.
all I. various, largest 45.7 x 65 cm (17 7/8 x 25 5/8 in.)
all S. various, largest 56.8 x 75.9 cm (22 3/8 x 29 7/8 in.)

All signed, dated and numbered 23/35 in pencil (there were also 10 artist's proofs), published by Pace Editions, Inc., New York, all framed.

Full Cataloguing

Estimate
£200,000 - 300,000 

Sold for £327,600

Contact Specialist

Rebecca Tooby-Desmond
Specialist, Head of Sale, Editions
T +44 207 318 4079
M +44 7502 417366
rtooby-desmond@phillips.com

Robert Kennan
Head of Editions, Europe
T +44 207 318 4075
M +44 7824 994 784
rkennan@phillips.com

Anne Schneider-Wilson
Senior International Specialist, Editions
T +44 207 318 4042
M +44 7760 864 748
aschneider-wilson@phillips.com   

 

Evening & Day Editions

London Auction 18 - 19 January 2023