Skip to content
Gems Press

Gems Press

Books Worth Remembering

  • Books Worth Remembering from Gems Press
  • Classic True Stories
  • Books to Read Free
  • Selected Graphics
  • Shop
  • Toggle search form

David Hockney on Living Projections

Posted on July 24, 2022 By Gayla

The thesis I am putting forward here is that from the early fifteenth century many Western artists used optics — by which I mean mirrors and lenses (or a combination of the two) — to create living projections. Some artists used these projected images directly to produce drawings and paintings, and before long this new way of depicting the world — this new way of seeing — had become widespread. Many art historians have argued that certain painters used the camera obscura in their work — Canaletto and Vermeer, in particular, are often cited — but, to my knowledge, no one has suggested that optics were used as widely or as early as I am arguing here.

In early 1999 I made a drawing using a camera lucida. It was an experiment, based on a hunch that Ingres, in the first decades of the nineteenth century, may have occasionally used this little optical device, then newly invented. My curiosity had been aroused when went to an exhibition of his portraits at London’s National Gallery and was struck by how I small the drawings were, yet so uncannily ‘accurate’. I know how difficult it is to achieve such precision, and wondered how he had done it. What followed led to this book.

At first, I found the camera lucida very difficult to use. It doesn’t project a real image of the subject, but an illusion of one in the eye. When you move your head everything moves with it, and the artist must learn to make very quick notations to fix the position of the eyes, nose and mouth to capture ‘a likeness’. It is concentrated work. I persevered and continued to use the method for the rest of the year — learning all the time. I began to take more care with lighting the subject, noticing how a good light makes a big difference when using optics, just like with photography. I also saw how much care other artists Caravaggio and Velazquez, for example — had taken in lighting their subjects, and how deep their shadows were. Optics need strong lighting, and strong lighting creates deep shadows. I was intrigued and began to scrutinize paintings very carefully. — David Hockney, in his book Secret Knowledge: Rediscovering the Lost Techniques of the Old Masters (read for free)

stories

Post navigation

Previous Post: Fanny Stevenson Finds Her Friend’s Grave
Next Post: The Newness of the Old

Related Posts

Risk Taking and Attractiveness in Chess stories
Left Luggage at the Dum Dum Airport stories
Jack Proves His Mettle stories
Andre Agassi Gets a Mohawk stories
Early Years of New York’s 21 Club stories
Jacques Vallée and the Story of the Virgin of Guadalupe stories

A Premium from Gems Press

Sign up for our mailing list (all it takes is your email address), and get a free PDF of the first 70 pages of the Gems Press book, Courtly Quips & Gentry Gems: The Best of Early English Wit*.

Recent Posts

  • Help with Using HTML to Make Kindle Books
  • Selected Graphic Elements
  • Selected Graphics: Decaying Daguerreotypes by Mathew Brady, Circa 1850
  • Selected Graphics: Dante’s Divine Comedy
  • Selected Graphics: Grunty Animals from The Flower of Nature, Circa 1350
  • More Great Books to Read for Free
  • Selected Graphics from The Black Cat, September 1905
  • Selected Graphics from The Black Cat, October 1904
  • About Gems Press
  • The Book of Glimmer: Adventures of Marcus & Stub
  • Courtly Quips & Gentry Gems: The Best of Early English Wit
  • A Collection of Tracts, on the Subjects of Taxing the British Colonies in America, and Regulating Their Trade.: Volume I
  • Gem’s Fascinating Leisure Reader: Volume One
  • Gem’s Fascinating Leisure Reader: Volume Two
  • Health in Your Homes, by J. Fletcher Horne
  • The House I Live In, by J.W. Ford, M.D.
  • How to Work, by Amos R. Wells
  • The Brother Cadfael Medieval Mystery Series, by Ellis Peters
  • List of 63 More Great Books You Can Read for Free
  • Sex Tips for Girls • by Cynthia Heimel
  • Books About Sleep That You Can Borrow
  • French Horn Hell
  • Eppie Lederer Becomes Ann Landers
  • A Love Letter from Dylan Thomas
  • Adventures of Madame Godin in the Country of the Amazons
  • Flower Spirals and the Fibonacci Sequence
  • Edward Snowden Explains What Happens When You Enter a URL in a Browser
  • Like a Fart in a Trance
  • Thomas Edison Explains Electricity in Paris, 1889
  • A Dubious Business Tip from Aristotle Onassis

*As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.

Sign up for our mailing list and get a free PDF of the first 70 pages of the Gems Press book, Courtly Quips & Gentry Gems: The Best of Early English Wit.*

About Gems Press

Contact us at contact (at) gemspress.earth

Copyright © 2025 Gems Press.

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs