<b>David Hockney</b>
(1963)
Hockney formed his first impressions of Los Angeles from books and magazines he read before he visited the city. While still in London he painted an invented shower scene, Domestic Scene, Los Angeles, 1963 (private collection), which included an image of two men taken from the homoerotic American magazine Physique Pictorial. The magazine, to which Hockney frequently referred for images, published photographs of men in various contrived poses, shot in supposed domestic interiors.
Though the magazine, published in Los Angeles by Bob Mizer of the Athletic Model Guild, was aimed at homosexual men, it had to be careful not to openly proclaim its market, so the resulting images, usually of virile young men pretending to be engaged in everyday domestic activities such as vacuuming, showering and washing-up, have a coyness that amused Hockney no end.
David Hockney: The Biography, 1937-1975, Christopher Simon Sykes
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/20345305-david-hockney
”The great thing about showers is that you can see the body. The body is more visible in a shower, so it’s more interesting to watch somebody have a shower rather than take a bath, and that was the appeal, and of course the technical thing of painting water has always interested me, the whole subject of transparency.”
David Hockney
Domestic Scene, Los Angeles
1963
Oil on canvas
152 x 152 cm
Private collection (sold by Christie’s 15 May 2019)
https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-6205164