
-
Rahm out to break 2025 win drought ahead of US PGA Championship
-
Japan tariff envoy departs for round two of US talks
-
Djurgarden eyeing Chelsea upset in historic Conference League semi-final
-
Haliburton leads comeback as Pacers advance, Pistons stay alive
-
Bunker-cafe on Korean border paints image of peace
-
Tunics & turbans: Afghan students don Taliban-imposed uniforms
-
Asian markets struggle as trade war hits China factory activity
-
Norwegian success story: Bodo/Glimt's historic run to a European semi-final
-
Spurs attempt to grasp Europa League lifeline to save dismal season
-
Thawing permafrost dots Siberia with rash of mounds
-
S. Korea prosecutors raid ex-president's house over shaman probe: Yonhap
-
Filipino cardinal, the 'Asian Francis', is papal contender
-
Samsung Electronics posts 22% jump in Q1 net profit
-
Pietro Parolin, career diplomat leading race to be pope
-
Nuclear submarine deal lurks below surface of Australian election
-
China's manufacturing shrinks in April as trade war bites
-
Financial markets may be the last guardrail on Trump
-
Swedish journalist's trial opens in Turkey
-
Kiss says 'honour of a lifetime' to coach Wallabies at home World Cup
-
US growth figure expected to make for tough reading for Trump
-
Opposition leader confirmed winner of Trinidad elections
-
Snedeker, Ogilvy to skipper Presidents Cup teams: PGA Tour
-
Win or bust in Europa League for Amorim's Man Utd
-
Trump celebrates 100 days in office with campaign-style rally
-
Top Cuban dissidents detained after court revokes parole
-
Arteta urges Arsenal to deliver 'special' fightback against PSG
-
Trump fires Kamala Harris's husband from Holocaust board
-
Pakistan says India planning strike as tensions soar over Kashmir attack
-
Weinstein sex attack accuser tells court he 'humiliated' her
-
France accuses Russian military intelligence over cyberattacks
-
Global stocks mostly rise as Trump grants auto tariff relief
-
Grand Vietnam parade 50 years after the fall of Saigon
-
Trump fires ex first gentleman Emhoff from Holocaust board
-
PSG 'not getting carried away' despite holding edge against Arsenal
-
Cuban dissidents detained after court revokes parole
-
Sweden stunned by new deadly gun attack
-
BRICS blast 'resurgence of protectionism' in Trump era
-
Trump tempers auto tariffs, winning cautious praise from industry
-
'Cruel measure': Dominican crackdown on Haitian hospitals
-
'It's only half-time': Defiant Raya says Arsenal can overturn PSG deficit
-
Dembele sinks Arsenal as PSG seize edge in Champions League semi-final
-
Les Kiss to take over Wallabies coach role from mid-2026
-
Real Madrid's Rudiger, Mendy and Alaba out injured until end of season
-
US threatens to quit Russia-Ukraine effort unless 'concrete proposals'
-
Meta releases standalone AI app, competing with ChatGPT
-
Zverev crashes as Swiatek scrapes into Madrid Open quarter-finals
-
BRICS members blast rise of 'trade protectionism'
-
Trump praises Bezos as Amazon denies plan to display tariff cost
-
France to tax small parcels from China amid tariff fallout fears
-
Hong Kong releases former opposition lawmakers jailed for subversion

Frail David Hockney celebrated in vast Paris retrospective
Increasingly frail but with undimmed passion, Britain's David Hockney has put aside his health worries to shape in Paris what he describes as the biggest exhibition of his vast career.
With around 400 works assembled over four floors, the Louis Vuitton Foundation in Paris has put on a stunning tribute to one of the world's best-selling living artists.
Although titled "David Hockney, 25" and mostly focused on the last quarter-century of his life, it contains paintings from his early career, as well as his blockbuster time in California in the 1960s.
In the last of 11 rooms, there are several unseen creations from the last two years, including a self-portrait in acrylic and a striking meditation on the afterlife inspired by Dante's Divine Comedy.
"It's enabled him to look back in a positive way," Norman Rosenthal, guest curator and a long-time friend of Hockney, told AFP ahead of the opening to the public on Wednesday.
"He's very, very happy with the exhibition."
Hockney, 87, insisted on overseeing the show, even taking an interest in the colour of the walls and sending back corrections for the texts written to inform visitors.
"He says it is the biggest exhibition of his career," Louis Vuitton Foundation curator Suzanne Page told AFP.
"He's been very involved."
- Twilight years -
Born in 1937 to working-class parents in the northern English town of Bradford, Hockney has painted everything from the fields of his native Yorkshire to the sun-soaked private homes of California.
The Paris show includes an entire room of portraits, as well as vivid landscapes and memorable moonlight scenes that he produced while living in Normandy, northern France, from 2019 to 2023.
There are touches of his trademark humour. In his most recent self portrait he is smoking a cigarette and wearing a yellow badge that reads "End Bossiness Soon".
The subtitle for the exhibition reprises a line he wrote to friends during the Covid-19 lockdowns when sending them pictures from Normandy: "Do remember they can’t cancel the spring."
But there are also hints of a man in his twilight years contemplating his mortality -- and perhaps his last major show.
An evolving digital creation of a sunrise in Normandy, which he produced like many others on his iPad, concludes with a quotation from French writer Francois de La Rochefoucauld.
"Remember you cannot look at the sun or death for very long," it reads.
Now in a wheelchair and with 24-hour care at his home in London, Hockney told The New York Times in a recent interview that he was grateful to be alive.
"Even last year, I thought I wouldn’t be here," he said. "But I still am."
He travelled to Paris ahead of the opening this week and was spotted around the elaborate Frank Gehry-designed Louis Vuitton Foundation wearing one of his classic colourful tweed suits.
Having steadily lost his hearing in recent decades, he stayed in a private room during the opening party on Monday, which was attended by French first lady Brigitte Macron among other VIPs.
- Smoking ban -
Some of his more recent work, including the iPad renderings from Normandy, have drawn mixed reviews but the exhibition also contains some of the classics from his portfolio that are usually in private hands.
These include the enigmatic "Portrait of An Artist (Pool with Two Figures)", which depicts Hockey's former lover staring into a Californian pool.
It sold for $90.3 million at auction in New York in 2018, briefly setting a record for a living artist.
Last year, six paintings by Hockney appeared in the top 100 most valuable works acquired at auction, according to data from the art market consultancy Artprice.
Rosenthal, one of Britain's most respected art figures, speaks of Hockney in the same breath as Picasso or Monet.
"I think this exhibition proves that his work over 60 years has a level that never changes," he explained.
"There's incredible variety and yet amazing consistency."
And Hockney continues to produce.
"He's reached a certain age and he's aware of it. He's a great smoker but I think he wants to go on," Rosenthal continued.
"He paints every day... He's painted the two nurses who are with him."
"David Hockney, 25" runs until September 1, 2025.
T.Germann--VB