The World's Largest Modern & Contemporary Prints & Editions Platform
Mo Asleep - Signed Print by David Hockney 1971 - MyArtBroker

Mo Asleep
Signed Print

David Hockney

£2,950-£4,400Value Indicator

$6,000-$9,000 Value Indicator

$5,500-$8,000 Value Indicator

¥29,000-¥45,000 Value Indicator

3,400-5,000 Value Indicator

$30,000-$45,000 Value Indicator

¥580,000-¥860,000 Value Indicator

$4,000-$6,000 Value Indicator

-3% AAGR

AAGR (5 years) This estimate blends recent public auction records with our own private sale data and network demand.

There aren't enough data points on this work for a comprehensive result. Please speak to a specialist by making an enquiry.

Medium: Etching

Edition size: 75

Year: 1971

Size: H 90cm x W 70cm

Signed: Yes

Format: Signed Print

Find out how Buying or Selling works.
Track this artwork in realtime

Watch artwork, manage valuations, track your portfolio and return against your collection

Track auction value trend

The value of David Hockney’s Mo Asleep (signed) is estimated to be worth between £2,950 and £4,400. This etching, created in 1971, has shown consistent value growth over the past five years. There have been 21 total sales at auction since its initial sale in June 2000. The hammer price over the past 12 months has ranged from £1,751 in September 2020 to £11,000 in December 2021. The average annual growth rate of this work is -3%. This is a limited edition artwork, part of a run of 75.

Unlock up-to-the-minute market data on David Hockney's Mo Asleep, login or create a free account today

Auction Results

Auction DateAuction HouseLocation
Hammer Price
Return to Seller
Buyer Paid
November 2023Artcurial France
November 2023Sotheby's Online United Kingdom
June 2023Bonhams New Bond Street United Kingdom
December 2021Bonhams New Bond Street United Kingdom
September 2021Bonhams Knightsbridge United Kingdom
March 2021Christie's New York United States
December 2020Forum Auctions London United Kingdom

Meaning & Analysis

This print was created in 1971 – a year in which David Hockney completed some of his most well-known paintings, such as Mr. and Mrs. Clark and Percy, Portrait Of Sir. David Webster, and Sur La Terrasse. Part of the Erotic Prints series, this work was made in a year which also saw Hockney travel widely, to destinations such as Morocco, Southwest France, Hawaii and even Japan. Despite Hockney’s itinerance during this period, the visible influence of California persists in much of the work produced in what became a crucial time in his artistic career. Mo Asleep is no exception to this. Depicting his long-serving assistant, Mo McDermott, as he sleeps on a patterned deckchair, one cannot help recall the swimming pools which feature in many of Hockney’s most famous works, namely A Bigger Splash (1967). With the bold floral patterns of the deckchair cover lending the piece of furniture a certain prominence, this print omits Mo’s immediate surroundings. A visual reference to travel and relaxation, Mo Asleep partially illuminates Hockney’s life away from the canvas or etching plate, exposing the intimacy of his personal and professional relationship with Mo in the process. Indeed, Hockney once remarked that Mo — one of his most-depicted subjects — was ‘his second greatest fan’.