David Hockney Shaped Fashion Designers With 300 Self-Portraits and a 1986 Best-Dressed Nod
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jun 12
David Hockney Shaped Fashion Designers With 300 Self-Portraits and a 1986 Best-Dressed Nod
3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jun 12
Summary
More than 300 self-portraits helped turn David Hockney’s trademark glasses, rugby shirts, bright suits and crumpled trenchcoats into a lasting fashion reference point.
His appeal to designers lay in his instinctive use of clashing color and imperfect styling—looks that appeared unforced yet instantly recognizable across the 1960s, 1970s and beyond.
Christopher Bailey’s 2013 Burberry collection and Paul Smith’s 2008 line both drew directly on Hockney, citing memorable encounters with his tonal but feisty tailoring.
That influence now extends beyond runway mood boards to social media and retail, with items like a £40 Coney Island sweatshirt dupe and renewed interest in rugby shirts tied to his image.
Hockney’s later style kept the same playful signature, from Cannes-tailored suits worn for painting and openings to the yellow Crocs that caught King Charles’s eye in 2022.