Between a Rock and a Blue Chair: David Hockney’s Rocky Mountains and Tired Indians (1965)

Travel and cultural exchange between the United Kingdom and the United States of America became a key feature of the 1960s, shaping the world view of many a British artist, curator, architect, writer, film-maker, and academic. Against that wider backdrop, I offer here a focused reading of David Hock...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Martin Hammer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Yale University 2017-04-01
Series:British Art Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://britishartstudies.ac.uk/issues/issue-index/issue-5/rocky-mountains
Description
Summary:Travel and cultural exchange between the United Kingdom and the United States of America became a key feature of the 1960s, shaping the world view of many a British artist, curator, architect, writer, film-maker, and academic. Against that wider backdrop, I offer here a focused reading of David Hockney’s 1965 painting, Rocky Mountains and Tired Indians. With its faux-naive idiom and overt but quirkily un-modern American theme, the work conveys the artist’s singular take on what it felt like to be a Brit at large in the US, an environment at once wondrously exotic and at times strikingly banal. Close analysis discloses Hockney’s rich repertoire of artistic and literary allusions in Rocky Mountains, and the meanings and associations these may have encapsulated.
ISSN:2058-5462