Price Database
01 February 2025
Artists
Auctions
Artnet Auctions
Global Auction Houses
Galleries
Events
News
Price Database
Use the Artnet Price Database
Market Alerts
Artnet Analytics
Hidden
Buy
Browse Artists
Artnet Auctions
Browse Galleries
Global Auction Houses
Events & Exhibitions
Speak With a Specialist
Art Financing
How to Buy
Sell
Sell With Us
Become a Gallery Partner
Become an Auction Partner
Receive a Valuation
How to Sell
Search
Hidden
David Hockney
Red Wire Plant
, 1998
77.5 x 91.4 cm. (30.5 x 36 in.)
close
David Hockney
Red Wire Plant
, 1998
77.5 x 91.4 cm. (30.5 x 36 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
David Hockney
British, born 1937
Red Wire Plant
,
1998
David Hockney
Red Wire Plant
, 1998
77.5 x 91.4 cm. (30.5 x 36 in.)
close
David Hockney
Red Wire Plant
, 1998
77.5 x 91.4 cm. (30.5 x 36 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Medium
Prints and multiples, Etching and aquatint in red and black on Somerset paper
Size
77.5 x 91.4 cm. (30.5 x 36 in.)
Markings
Signed, dated and numbered by the artist in pencil recto
Price
Price on Request
Contact Gallery About This Work
ARCHEUS / POST-MODERN
London
Artworks
Artists
Contact Gallery
Sell a similar work with Artnet Auctions
About this Artwork
Edition
Edition of 35
Size Notes
Size given is the sheet size, frame size is 33 ¾ x 39 ¾ in : 86.5 x 101 cm
Movement
Contemporary Art
Provenance
Acquired directly from the Hockney Studio by the previous owner
Literature
David Hockney Recent Etchings, Alan Cristea Gallery, London, 1999, pp. 24 & 25 (col. illus.)
See more
Description
The etching and aquatint print Red Wire Plant (1998) demonstrates Hockney’s unique style of mark making in this medium as the artist indicates the plant’s flowers only by the negative space left, with encroaching marks further delineating their shape and detail. This etching and aquatint work is also an excellent example of Hockney’s inventive approach to the production of his prints due to the use of wire wool and other unconventional etching tools. This approach was inspired by the graphics of Vincent Van Gogh and Pablo Picasso, who have both influenced Hockney throughout his career.
Red Wire Plant was produced in collaboration with the artist’s old friend and master printer, Maurice Payne, who Hockney has depicted many times throughout his career. Payne lived with Hockney for more than a year and together they set up a print studio in the artist’s Hollywood Hills home, with Payne leaving prepared plates around the house. This practice allowed Hockney to respond spontaneously to the characters and objects that surrounded him throughout the day, with the focus on the artist’s domestic environment imbuing the prints with an intimate quality. In all, fourteen etchings were created during this period.
The production of these etchings was the first time that Hockney had returned to this printing process since The Blue Guitar series in the mid-seventies and is also the last group of etchings that the artist has made to date. This example of Red Wire Plant which, importantly for etchings, has an early number within the edition of 35. It has not appeared at auction since 2015 although Van Gogh Chair, from the same series of fourteen etchings, recently achieved a record price of $239,400 at Sotheby’s New York in April 2021.
This example in PRISTINE condition - never framed or exposed to light since publication.
See more
David Hockney News
View all David Hockney News
→
Books
Checkmate! A New Book Unpacks the Bond Between Art and Chess
by Richard Whiddington
On View
Hauser and Wirth Teams Up with Steve Martin on a Love Letter to Los Angeles
by Eileen Kinsella
Art & Exhibitions
Traveling This Summer? Don't Skip These 11 Exhibitions on View Across the U.S.
by Artnet News
Art World
Art Bites: The Polarizing Art Theory Named After David Hockney
by Richard Whiddington