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A landmark David Hockney exhibition is coming to London this spring – here’s why it will be one of the city’s best art shows in 2026

His digital artwork ‘A Year in Normandie’ will be on display in the capital for the very first time this spring

Amy Houghton
Written by
Amy Houghton
Contributing writer
A Year in Normandie (detail), 2020-2021, composite iPad painting © David Hockney
Image: David Hockney | A Year in Normandie (detail), 2020-2021, composite iPad painting © David Hockney
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Rarely a year goes by without a London gallery putting on some sort of David Hockney exhibition – everybody’s just mad for the guy. And 2026 is no different. 

David Hockney: A Year in Normandie and Some Other Thoughts About Painting will be on at the Serpentine this spring and summer. Here’s why, alongside a Frida Kahlo show at the Tate and a Renoir retrospective at the National Gallery, we reckon it’ll be one of the best exhibitions to see in London this year. 

The 88-year-old artist’s A Year in Normandie is a 90m long piece that he produced on his iPad during the pandemic. Made up of 220 panels depicting the changing seasons in and around his French garden, it’s inspired by the Bayeux Tapestry – which fittingly will be on display in the UK for the first time in nearly a millennium later this year – and Chinese scrolls. This will be the first time that A Year in Normandie has been on show in London. 

David Hockney "A Year in Normandie" 2020-2021 (detail)Composite iPad painting© David Hockney
Image: David Hockney‘A Year in Normandie’ 2020-2021 (detail) Composite iPad painting© David Hockney

The show will also focus on works like Moon Room, which reflects the painter’s lifelong interest in the lunar cycle, and several other digital paintings that were created during lockdown as part of his Sunrise series. 

At the time, Hockney said of his iPad paintings: ‘I began drawing the winter trees on a new iPad. Then this virus started…

‘I went on drawing the winter trees that eventually burst into blossom. Meanwhile the virus is going mad, and many people said my drawings were a great respite from what was going on.’

Bettina Korek, the Serpentine’s CEO, and Hans Ulrich Obrist, its artistic director said that the show ‘promises to be a landmark cultural moment’. The best news is that, unlike most other big name exhibitions happening in the city this year, David Hockney at the Serpentine will be completely free to see. It’ll be on from March 12 until August 23. 

🎨 See all of the 12 best art exhibitions coming to London in 2026 here.

ICYMI: The Serpentine Pavilion is celebrating its 25th anniversary this summer with a dazzling installation by a Mexican architect.

Plus: These are the best exhibitions on in London right now

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