https://www.flickr.com/photos/34621468@N00/14501909492/in/pool-13867288@N00
http://www.canadiannaturephotographer.com/hockney.html
I was able to find a few groups on Flickr as well of Hockney style images made in Photoshop. The Flickr artists [Lisa IndigoBurns Wormsley] did a great job with getting a huge range of angles of just someones face to create this huge photo that turns a normal portrait into something way more interesting.
The Canadian Nature Photographer has multiple personal examples on the website. His very last one, of the waterfall, is one that I think he did a great job representing the Hockney style. He did a good job of moving the individual images close enough together for us to understand the main idea, but also looking at some of the images as individuals, you see some finer detail. Having each image bordered with a white box helps define each part of this Hockney and also makes us look closer at the individual landmarks of this photo: the dead log in bottom left, the rocks in the middle and the surrounding trees. The photo can be broken up but works well together.
http://www.canadiannaturephotographer.com/hockney.html
I was able to find a few groups on Flickr as well of Hockney style images made in Photoshop. The Flickr artists [Lisa IndigoBurns Wormsley] did a great job with getting a huge range of angles of just someones face to create this huge photo that turns a normal portrait into something way more interesting.
The Canadian Nature Photographer has multiple personal examples on the website. His very last one, of the waterfall, is one that I think he did a great job representing the Hockney style. He did a good job of moving the individual images close enough together for us to understand the main idea, but also looking at some of the images as individuals, you see some finer detail. Having each image bordered with a white box helps define each part of this Hockney and also makes us look closer at the individual landmarks of this photo: the dead log in bottom left, the rocks in the middle and the surrounding trees. The photo can be broken up but works well together.