Visiting David Hockney's '90s Los Angeles Home Was Like Stepping Into One of His Paintings – Tour His Pink and Green Dreamscape of a Living Room

In celebration of Hockney's life, Homes & Gardens revisits the painter's Hollywood home to explore his enduring impact on design

david hockney in los angeles
(Image credit: Anthony Barboza via Getty Images)

It's impossible to talk about the Technicolor California aesthetic without talking about David Hockney. The British artist was a pioneer in the use of vibrant color palettes, popularizing eye-catching shades of turquoise, bubblegum pink, and sunny yellows, with his mid-century works cementing them in the lexicon of the Golden State. In celebration of his life, Homes & Gardens looks back on how the painter's interiors embodied his enduring impact on art.

Los Angeles has been a major inspiration for Hockney since the 1960s, so it only makes sense that his Hollywood Hills home was an expansion of the artist's vibrant universe.

A 1991 photoshoot with Paul Harris shows Hockney posing in his living room, where the walls are alive with pink, green, and a hand-painted fireplace. A glimpse inside feels like a living stage set - the interiors are theatrical, yet welcoming and cozy.

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When he purchased the home in 1980, Hockney's Montcalm Avenue house was a plain, brown, ranch-style property. He gradually transformed the home over the next several years, incorporating bright colors into each space. As he told Architectural Digest in 1983, 'Everyone who comes here likes it. People don't dare such colors usually.'

david hockney in his LA house

David Hockney in his Hollywood Hills living room, 1991

(Image credit: Paul Harris via Getty Images)

The theatricality of his home is no coincidence. In 1981, Hockney designed sets inspired by Pablo Picasso's work for the Metropolitan Opera's Parade triple bill show, and this project continued to influence the design of his home. He stated: 'The colors of the house are from Parade – in particular, from Maurice Ravel's L'Enfant et les sortilèges, the most beautiful musical story ever written, and the most colorful of all the operas.'

Hockney's colorful living room, in particular, captures this obsession with the interplay of light and shadow, color, and surrealism that defines his work. The painted fireplace features one of his beloved dachshunds, another Hockney signature.

The green and pink walls feel gorgeously Californian, and the perfect complement to his patterned armchairs. It's a reminder that design has the enduring power to reflect our personalities and convey our legacy, even long after we are gone.

'Hockney’s genius lay in his complete lack of inhibition when it came to palette,' comments Megan Slack, the Head of Celebrity Style at Homes & Gardens.

'At a time when interior design often favored safe, predictable neutrals, Hockney treated his home as a living canvas. He didn't just use color to decorate; he used it to manipulate emotion and light. He proved that high-contrast, saturated hues don't make a home feel overwhelming – instead, they give it an undeniable sense of joy.'


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Sophie Edwards
News Editor

Sophie is a writer and News Editor on the Celebrity Style team at Homes & Gardens. She is fascinated by the intersection of design and popular culture and is particularly passionate about researching trends and interior history. She is an avid pop culture fan and has interviewed Martha Stewart and Hillary Duff.

In her free time, Sophie freelances on design news for Westport Magazine and Livingetc. She also has a newsletter, My Friend's Art, in which she covers music, culture, and fine art through a personal lens. Her fiction has appeared in Love & Squalor and The Isis Magazine.

Before joining Future, Sophie worked in editorial at Fig Linens and Home, a boutique luxury linens brand. She has an MSc from Oxford University and a BA in Creative Writing and Sociology from Sarah Lawrence College.