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Artworks
David Hockney
Pleading for the Child (from Six Fairy Tales from The Brothers Grimm), 1969EtchingH 62cm X W 45cmEdition of 100signed and numbered in pencilPOADavid Hockney’s Pleading for the Child is an etching from the series Illustrations for Six Fairy Tales from the Brothers Grimm, in which the artist reimagines traditional narratives through a...David Hockney’s Pleading for the Child is an etching from the series Illustrations for Six Fairy Tales from the Brothers Grimm, in which the artist reimagines traditional narratives through a highly personal and expressive visual language. The work draws upon the story of Rumpelstiltskin from Grimms' Fairy Tales, focusing on the emotional climax in which the queen begs the strange little man to spare her child. Rather than illustrating the scene literally, Hockney distils it into a charged moment of psychological tension and vulnerability.
The composition centres on the act of pleading itself, with the figures rendered through linear, economical marks that emphasise gesture and posture over detailed description. The spatial setting is minimal, allowing the emotional weight of the interaction to dominate the image. This restraint heightens the sense of drama, as the viewer is drawn into the imbalance of power between the desperate mother and the enigmatic figure who holds control over her fate.
Hockney’s use of etching techniques, including fine line work and areas of tonal contrast, contributes to the atmosphere of unease and intensity. As with other works in the series, he avoids direct narrative clarity in favour of evoking the underlying themes of the tale, fear, desperation, and the fragility of human circumstance. In Pleading for the Child, the familiar story is transformed into a modern visual meditation on vulnerability and the emotional extremes embedded within folklore.
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