When Hockney first visited Betty Freeman’s house in California, he planned to ask if he could make a painting of her pool. But the way the interior and exterior spaces of her home blended together captivated him. “I’d never seen homes like that,” he later said. His 1966 Beverly Hills Housewife, above, depicts Freeman and explores the spaces both inside and outside her home.
Hockney painted the house on two canvases, creating a horizontal 6-by-12- foot-wide composition. It echoes the long, low arrangement of the modern home. Geometric shapes divide the scene into the foreground (closest to the viewer), the middle ground, and the background (furthest from the viewer). Thin diagonal lines show light reflecting on glass walls.
As you look at each section of the composition, ask: Are you looking across the patio? Through a window? At a reflection? Is the space inside or outside the house? Hockney creates a sense of mystery about the home and those who live there.