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David Hockney Poster: Great Pyramid at Giza with Broken Head from Thebes (1963 Print)

Price range: $3.90 through $59.90

Celebrate David Hockney’s early Pop Art masterpiece, “Great Pyramid at Giza with Broken Head from Thebes” (1963). A vibrant, surreal blend of Egyptian mythology and modern landscape. Perfect for art collectors.

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Museum-Grade Quality 200 GSM premium matte paper
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What You Will Receive

  • Made to order, museum-grade art print. Frame not included unless stated.
  • Printed on 200 GSM premium matte paper for crisp detail and zero glare.
  • Archival giclée inks that resist fading for decades.
  • Multiple size options. Use the selector above.
  • Protective packaging: rigid mailer or sturdy tube.
Paper
200 GSM premium matte
Finish
Non-reflective matte
Printing
Giclée digital process
Inks
Archival, fade-resistant
Production
Made after you order
Quality
Sharp detail, rich tones
Packaging
Rigid mailer or tube
Durability
100+ year colour life

Print Quality

Every print is produced using state-of-the-art giclée technology on heavyweight 200 GSM matte paper. The non-reflective surface eliminates glare while the archival pigment inks deliver rich, accurate colours designed to last a lifetime.

Size Guide

For walls above furniture, choose a print roughly two thirds to three quarters the width of the piece below it. Smaller sizes up to 11×14 inches suit gallery walls. Larger formats of 18×24 inches and above create striking focal points.

The Great Pyramid at Giza with Broken Head (1963)

Immerse your space in the unique vision of David Hockney with this iconic fine art reproduction. “Great Pyramid at Giza with Broken Head from Thebes” dates back to 1963, a pivotal year in Hockney’s career as he synthesized elements of Pop Art with his own distinctive style following travels to Egypt. This work captures the surreal beauty and weight of history, blending recognizable monumental architecture with fragmented, dream-like elements.

Symbolism and Style

This painting is a fascinating study in contrast. The colossal, geometric presence of the Great Pyramid anchors the background, juxtaposed against a lively, stylized Egyptian landscape. A prominent palm tree vertically slices the composition, drawing the eye down to the fragmented blue statue head—a relic from Thebes. This broken mask suggests themes of ancient decay, human mortality, and the disjointed nature of memory, often seen in Hockney’s early explorative works. The use of flat planes and vibrant, yet controlled, color shifts—from the dusty yellows of the desert to the turquoise waters—showcases the artist’s burgeoning mastery of color and narrative storytelling. It serves as a powerful testament to the influence of travel on Hockney’s developing iconography, making it an essential piece for any collector of 20th-century British art.