
David Hockney: The Moon Room
GRAY Chicago, West Gallery
Jul 10 - Aug 22, 2026
Once, when we were just sitting outside the house, we put all the lights off in the house to see the moonlight more clearly. The moon could then be seen to cast shadows of the trees on the grass, so with my backlit iPad I could draw it. This would have been virtually impossible without it.
— David Hockney
In the spring of 2020, David Hockney was inspired by the sight of an unusually large moon—a supermoon, occurring when the moon is closest to Earth. Recalling the moment, the artist reflected on the challenge of capturing the experience through photography, emphasizing drawing’s unique ability to convey the intensity of perception: “I was looking at the moon for quite a while, and when you do that, you see this halo around it that you don't see in photographs at all because it's too far. That's an example of the way lenses push things away. In a lens view, it would be disappointingly small... My niece said that she tried to photograph a big moon, and I said, 'Well, no, you have to draw it, like the sunrise. It can't be photographed because it is the source of light.'” 1
GRAY announces David Hockney: The Moon Room opening in the gallery’s Chicago location on July 10, 2026. The exhibition centers on a recently released series focused on the artist’s observations of the moon. Created in 2020 at his Normandy studio in France, Hockney used his iPad to make daily paintings of the surrounding landscape, working en plein air to capture the changing seasons as illuminated by moonlight. Hockney turned to the iPad for its immediacy and responsiveness, a medium that bridges the disciplines of painting and drawing while accommodating the spontaneity of working outdoors, especially in the dark. The exhibition will remain on view through August 22, 2026. This is Hockney’s sixteenth exhibition with GRAY.
Throughout his career, Hockney has consistently engaged with new technologies, particularly those designed for widespread use and accessibility. From his early experiments with Polaroid cameras, photocopiers, and fax machines to his pioneering use of digital tools such as the Macintosh computer and Photoshop, his practice has continually evolved alongside technological innovation. Since 2009, the iPhone and iPad have become central to his work, enabling an expansive body of digital drawings and paintings. Introduced in 2010, the iPad, in particular, afforded the artist greater scale and precision, while its playback function reveals the temporal unfolding of each composition, offering insight into the process of its making.
The Moon Room was first presented by Florence Calame-Levert in David Hockney: Normandism, presented from March 3 through September 22, 2024, at the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Rouen in Normandy, France.
ABOUT DAVID HOCKNEY
David Hockney (1937–2026, Bradford, West Yorkshire, UK) is considered one of the most influential and defining figures in contemporary art. His seven-decade career and prolific oeuvre is characterized by formal invention, an intellectual inquiry into the nature of depiction and perspective, and a sustained commitment to celebrating and portraying the world around him.
Image: DAVID HOCKNEY (1937–2026)
31st October 2020, No. 4, 2020
iPad painting printed on paper, mounted on Dibond
27 1⁄8 × 39 1⁄8 inches
68.9 × 99.4 cm
Edition of 15
All Images: © David Hockney. Courtesy GRAY Chicago/New York