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Largest-ever Hockney exhibition to open in Paris in April

The largest exhibition ever of the works of British artist David Hockney, including canvases that have never before been displayed, is to open in Paris in April at the Fondation Louis Vuitton, which Hockney said will also include his most recent paintings, adding 'I think it’s going to be very good'. 

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A previously unseen painting by David Hockney has been revealed for the first time before its unveiling in the biggest exhibition to be devoted to one of Britain’s foremost living artists, reports The Guardian.

Titled After Blake: Less is Known than People Think, the work will be among hundreds of previously unknown Hockneys that are to be displayed alongside his famous masterpieces at the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris from April.

Hockney, 87, found inspiration for the enigmatic composition in a watercolour by William Blake, the early 19th-century master, who was in turn inspired by Dante’s Divine Comedy, the 14th-century narrative poem about the author’s imaginary journey through hell, purgatory and paradise.

The work will appear alongside new paintings, created within recent weeks and months, as well as those that have been hidden from view for decades in the artist’s studio or in private collections. Other previously unseen works will include a new self-portrait, Play within a Play, which shows the artist contemplating his own art.

Hockney has been invited to take over the entire building – a vast landmark “glass cloud” designed by the architect Frank Gehry – for an exhibition that he describes as exceptional in its scale.

The new exhibition will feature the Bradford-born artist’s best-known paintings, including A Bigger Splash and will also showcase Hockney’s multidisciplinary talent as a painter, draughtsman, printmaker, stage designer and photographer, in a career in which he has employed a range of tools from oil and canvas to digital tablet.

Over the past two years, Hockney has worked closely on the show with its curator, Sir Norman Rosenthal, the former chief curator of the Royal Academy of Arts, who has staged a number of ground-breaking exhibitions.

Rosenthal said: “David Hockney is one of the great artists. He is as close to Van Gogh as you can be as a contemporary artist. He’s serious, but also unbelievably accessible, a kind of artist-philosopher. Working with him on this scale, I’ve really discovered him.”

In a statement, Hockney said: “This exhibition means an enormous amount because it is the largest exhibition I’ve ever had – 11 rooms in the Fondation Louis Vuitton. Some of the most recent paintings I’m working on now will be included in it, and I think it’s going to be very good.”

Read more of this report from The Guardian.