Two major exhibitions of new work by Bradford-born artist David Hockney open in London this week.
Sketches of the capital will be among the pictures on show in an exhibition at Annely Juda Fine Art.
The pictures, done in a notebook during his stay in Britain, are part of the Painting On Paper exhibition which starts on Friday.
The show of new work by the artist focuses on his experiments with watercolour, a medium he had not used before.
Portraits, landscapes, sketches and line drawings created during 2002 will be included.
The exhibition centres around nine large landscapes inspired by Mr Hockney's visits to Norway and Iceland.
The artist, who lives in Los Angeles, went to Scandinavia for the amount of daylight and was inspired by the scenery there.
A spokesman for the gallery said: "The landscape paintings from the trip are characteristically bold in colour and form and being painted on multiple sheets of paper, are of a scale and impact rarely seen in watercolour."
A series of double and single portraits painted at Mr Hockney's studio will also feature in the show.
Other work will include studies of bonsai trees and the sketches of London street scenes.
The drawings include a copy of the Evening Standard, the view from a Number nine bus and the inside of the Tate Britain art gallery.
Mr Hockney saw his first spring in Britain in 22 years during his stay in the capital, enjoying walks through Holland Park on his way to sittings with fellow artist Lucien Freud.
Another exhibition featuring five double watercolour portraits starts tomorrow at the National Portrait Gallery in London.
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