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HOWARD HODGKIN

Howard Hodgkin

Ice Cream

2015-16

Hand-painted carborundum relief

from 1 plate, printed on Zinc

White/Yellow Ochre/Vermillion mix and

Zinc White/Yellow Ochre/

Deep Red Mix on Tan 280 gsm paper

30″ x 44-1/4″ (76 x 112.5 cm)

Edition of 30

Howard Hodgkin (born 1932) is a British painter and printmaker. His works are distinguished by dense layers of expressive brush strokes, richly saturated colors, and vivacious shapes. Although affiliated with abstraction, Hodgkin’s paintings evoke specific memories, social encounters, or atmospheric conditions. Yet, the canvases—and often the frames incorporated into the imagery—are worked and reworked to such a level that the original subjects are obscured almost beyond recognition. Hodgkin’s works range in scale from intimate, enigmatic “portraits” to large-scale architectonic abstractions.

Howard Hodgkin was born in Hammersmith, London in 1932. He became interested in art early on, precociously declaring his profession at the age of five. Hodgkin and his family were evacuated from London at the onset of World War II and spent three years living on Long Island. Experiences at the Museum of Modern Art in New York opened Hodgkin’s young mind to the artistic possibilities of Modernism for the first time.

From 1949 to 1950 Hodgkin studied at the Camberwell School of Art. However, pressure to conform to the Euston Road style practiced by his instructors left Hodgkin feeling like an outsider. He then studied at the Bath Academy of Art, Corsham starting in 1950. During his four years there, he had his first public show in the Bath Art Society’s group show.

In 1955 Hodgkin settled in London. A year later, Hodgkin was teaching part-time at the Bath Academy of Art. In 1960, at age 28, Hodgkin had his first solo exhibition at Arthur Tooth & Sons in London. He then moved his studio to 12 Addison Gardens, west London.

Hodgkin took his first trip to India in 1964, financed by London dealer John Kasmin. Hodgkin’s time in the subcontinent affected his work on a profound level and he would return many times. Hodgkin’s work was displayed in London along with his contemporaries Richard Smith and Robyn Denny. He was also briefly incorporated into the British Pop Art movement, but felt that his work fell outside of that categorization.

In 1966, Hodgkin opened another studio in Wiltshire, while maintaining his London location. During this time, he began teaching classes at Chelsea School of Art in London. By 1970 Hodgkin was made a Trustee at the Tate Gallery. Shortly after, in 1971, he had his first solo show abroad in Cologne, Germany. Hodgkin’s reputation as an artist continued to grow organically throughout Europe.

At age 41, Hodgkin made his American debut at the Jill Kornblee Gallery, New York. His work was a success in the United States and Hodgkin felt that the audience understood the balance he struck between representation and abstraction. In 1976 Hodgkin was appointed CBE, Commander of the British Empire, and was honored as an artist in residence at Brasenose College in Oxford. In 1978, he was appointed as Trustee of the National Gallery in London.

In the 1980s Hodgkin held significant exhibitions in both the United States and United Kingdom. In 1984, he represented Britain at the Venice Biennial with twenty-four paintings inspired by international travel. Hodgkin was awarded the 1985 Turner Prize for the international impact of his painting. The same year the Tate Gallery held an exhibition of twenty-five important prints that traveled to a number of international locations.

In 1988, Hodgkin was appointed as an Honorary Fellow by Brasenose College in Oxford. In 1990 the British Council organized the exhibition Howard Hodgkin: Small Paintings, which traveled extensively throughout Europe to Nantes, France; Barcelona, Spain; Edinburgh, Scotland; and Dublin, Ireland. Hodgkin was awarded knighthood in 1992.

The 1990s saw an expansion of Hodgkin’s work both in terms of physical scale and an increasingly international acclaim. Breaking from his smaller works, he created large-scale compositions for the BBC Billboard Art Project. In 1994 Andrew Graham-Dixon wrote the first retrospective monograph on Hodgkin. From 1995–96 an exhibition of thirty-eight works traveled to major institutions throughout the United States and Europe including the Metropolitan Museum, New York; the Modern Art Museum, Fort Worth; the Hayward Gallery, London; and Kunsteverein für die Rheinlände und Westfalen, Düsseldorf. Hodgkin was awarded the Shakespeare Prize in 1997, and received an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Oxford in 2000.

After 2000, Hodgkin began dedicating more effort to printmaking and created some of his largest prints including works in the series As Time Goes By. Hodgkin continues to produce powerful works and engage the artistic community. In 2010 he held exhibitions at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford and Modern Art, Oxford. Hodgkin created a powerful body of large-scale prints, which were exhibited in Acquainted With the Night in 2012 and 2013.

2017 – “After All” Jonathan Novak Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, California

2017 – “Howard Hodgkin: Absent Friends,” National Portrait Gallery, London, England

2017 – “In the Pink,” Gagosian Gallery, Hong Kong

2017 – “Howard Hodgkin: India on Paper,” Victoria Art Gallery, Bath, England

2017 – “Howard Hodgkin: Painting India,” The Hepworth Wakefield, West Yorkshire, England

2016 – “After All” Alan Cristea Gallery, London, England

2016 – “People on Paper,” Abbot Hall Art Gallery, Kendal, England

2016 – “From Memory,” Gagosian Gallery, New York

2015 – “Important Works on Paper” Jonathan Novak Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, California

2015 – CSMVS, Mumbai, India

2014 – Alan Cristea Gallery, London, England

2014 – Gagosian Gallery, Paris, France

2013 – Gagosian Gallery, Rome, Italy

2012/13 – “Acquainted With the Night,” Jonathan Novak Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, California

2012/13 – “Acquainted With the Night,” Alan Cristea, London, United Kingdom

2011 – “Howard Hodgkin: New Paintings 2007-2011,” The Gagosian Gallery, New York, New York

2011 – “Howard Hodgkin: New Paintings,” Peder Lund, Oslo, Norway

2011 – “Time and Place, Paintings 2001-2010,” San Diego Museum of Art, San Diego

2010 – “Time and Place: Paintings 2001-2010,” Modern Art Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom

2009/10 – “Seven New Paintings,” Gagosian Gallery, London, United Kingdom

2009 – “Howard Hodgkin: Prints,” PM Gallery and House, London, United Kingdom

2008 – “Howard Hodgkin,” Gagosian Gallery, London, United Kingdom

2007 – “Howard Hodgkin: Paintings 1992 – 2007,” Yale Centre for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut

2006 – “Howard Hodgkin,” Tate Britain, London, United Kingdom

2005 – “Howard Hodgkin: Small Paintings,” Galerie Lutz & Thalmann, Zurich, Switzerland

2003 – “Howard Hodgkin: Paintings,” Gagosian Gallery, New York, New York

2002 – “Howard Hodgkin,” Dean Gallery, National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh, Scotland

2001 – “All You Need to See and Know,” Dulwich Picture Gallery, London, United Kingdom

1999 – “Howard Hodgkin: New Paintings,” Anthony d’Offay Gallery, London, United Kingdom

1998 – “Howard Hodgkin: Paintings,” Gagosian Gallery, New York, New York

1995/96 – “Howard Hodgkin: Paintings,” Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York

1995 – “Howard Hodgkin: Venetian Views 1995,” Alan Cristea Gallery, London, United Kingdom

1993 – “Howard Hodgkin,” Anthony d’Offay Gallery, London, United Kingdom

1991 – “The Way We Live Now, by Susan Sontag and Howard Hodgkin,” Karsten Schubert, London, United Kingdom

1990 – “Howard Hodgkin,” Galerie Michael Werner, Cologne, Germany

1990 – “Howard Hodgkin: Paintings and Graphics,” Ganz Gallery, Cambridge, United Kingdom

1989 – “Howard Hodgkin: Etchings and Lithographs 1980 – 1986,” Joanne Chappell Gallery, San Francisco, California

1989 – “Howard Hodgkin,” Gallery Ikeda-Bijitsu, Tokyo, Japan

1988 – “Howard Hodgkin,” Waddington Galleries, London, United Kingdom

1985/86 – “Howard Hodgkin: Prints,”  Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York

1985 – “Howard Hodgkin: Works on Paper, Paintings Created in India, 1978. Hand-Colored Prints, 1977 – 1983,” La Louver Gallery, Los Angeles, California

1984/85 – “Howard Hodgkin: Forty Paintings,” The Phillips Collection, Whitechapel Art Gallery and British Council, toured to: British Pavilion – Venice Biennale, Italy; The Philips Collection – Washington D.C.; Yale Center for British Art – New Haven, Connecticut; Kestner-Gesellschaft – Hannover, Germany; London, United Kingdom

1984 – “Howard Hodgkin: Recent Work,” M. Knoedler and Co. Inc, New York, New York

1982 – “Howard Hodgkin’s Indian Leaves,” Tate Gallery, London, United Kingdom

1981/82 – “Howard Hodgkin: Recent Prints,” University of Queensland Art Museum and British Council Exhibition, Australia tour

1981 – “Recent Prints by Howard Hodgkin,” Bernard Jacobson, New York, New York

1977/79 – “Howard Hodgkin: Complete Prints, Museum of Art, Oxford, United Kingdom

1976 – “Howard Hodgkin: New Paintings,” Waddington Galleries, London, United Kingdom

1975 – “Howard Hodgkin,” Arnolfini Gallery, Bristol, United Kingdom

1972 – “Howard Hodgkin: Screenprints,” Waddington Galleries, London, United Kingdom

1971 – “H. Hodgkin,” Gallery Muller, Cologne, Germany

1970 – “Howard Hodgkin,” Arnolfini Gallery, Bristol, United Kingdom

1969 – “Howard Hodgkin: New Paintings,” Kasmin Gallery, London, United Kingdom

1967 – “Howard Hodgkin: Recent Paintings,” Arthur Tooth and Sons, London, United Kingdom

1964 – “Howard Hodgkin: Recent Paintings,” Arthur Tooth and Sons, London, United Kingdom

1962 – “Howard Hodgkin: An Exhibition of Recent Paintings,” Arthur Tooth and Sons, London, United Kingdom

INQUIRE ABOUT WORKS AVAILABLE BY HOWARD HODGKIN:

Abstract Howard Hodgkin Print in Brown

Howard Hodgkin

Mud

2012

Hand-painted sugar-lift aquatint

from 4 copper plates on 2 sheets of

Arches Moulin du Gue blanc 350

gsm paper

Overall paper and image:

68-1/2″ x 96-1/16″  (174 x 244 cm) 

Framed: 74″ x 101″ x 4″ (188 x 256.5 x 10.2 cm)

Edition of 12