Throughout his “Weather Series,” David Hockney references artists of old to tell a pictorial story. “Rain” evokes the work of Japanese printmaker Hokusai. (Image courtesy of the National Gallery of Art/Gift of the Woodward Foundation/(c) David Hockney and Gemini G.E.L.)
Throughout his “Weather Series,” David Hockney references artists of old to tell a pictorial story. “Sun” conjures images of Johannes Vermeer. (Image courtesy of the National Gallery of Art/Gift of the Woodward Foundation/(c) David Hockney and Gemini G.E.L.)
Throughout his “Weather Series,” David Hockney references artists of old to tell a pictorial story. “Mist” recalls Claude Monet’s light studies of Rouen Cathedral. (Image courtesy of the National Gallery of Art/Gift of the Woodward Foundation/(c) David Hockney and Gemini G.E.L.)
Throughout his “Weather Series,” David Hockney references artists of old to tell a pictorial story. “Snow” brings to mind Hokusai once more. (Image courtesy of the National Gallery of Art/Gift of the Woodward Foundation/(c) David Hockney and Gemini G.E.L.)
Throughout his “Weather Series,” David Hockney references artists of old to tell a pictorial story. This is “Lightning.” (Image courtesy of the National Gallery of Art/Gift of the Woodward Foundation/(c) David Hockney and Gemini G.E.L.)
Throughout his “Weather Series,” David Hockney references artists of old to tell a pictorial story. “Wind” brings all the elements together as scraps of painted paper flying about above the Melrose Avenue sign that points toward Gemini. (Image courtesy of the National Gallery of Art/Gift of the Woodward Foundation/(c) David Hockney and Gemini G.E.L.)