The art world is awash with retrospective celebration, but let’s cut through the sentimentality. David Hockney, the titan of British pop art, created his luminous ‘Gay Paradise’ series while homosexual acts were still a criminal offence in the United Kingdom. The Offences Against the Person Act 1861, and later the Sexual Offences Act 1967’s partial decriminalisation, cast a long shadow. Yet Hockney’s work, dripping with colour and defiance, was produced under the very legal strictures that London’s progressive elite now congratulate themselves for dismantling.
This is the paradox of legacy. We admire the art while forgetting the interest on the repression that financed it. Hockney, like many artists, operated in a market that valued expression but punished identity. His ‘A Bigger Picture’ was not just a canvas; it was a capital asset. The question investors should be asking: what was the risk premium on being gay in 1960s Britain?
The Fiscal Realist’s View
From a purely economic standpoint, Hockney’s ability to produce masterpieces under criminalisation represents a remarkable inefficiency in the market for human capital. Society was wasting talent by outlawing its source. The cost of that repression can be measured in lost output, stifled innovation, and the brain drain of artists who fled to more tolerant shores. Hockney stayed, but others didn’t. The capital flight of creative minds to America and Europe in the mid-20th century is a hidden liability on the national balance sheet.
Today’s celebrations of progress are a form of moral inflation. We inflate the virtue of our present without accounting for the debt we owe to past sacrifices. Hockney’s ‘Gay Paradise’ is not a product of the liberal consensus; it is a triumph against it. The government that criminalised him now claims his legacy. This is the politics of rent-seeking: taking credit for an asset you tried to destroy.
The Gilt Market of Reputation
Consider the yield curve of social progress. Short-term, the persecution of homosexuals depressed the value of queer creativity. Long-term, the eventual decriminalisation released a torrent of artistic output that boosted Britain’s cultural GDP. But we must ask: are we overpaying for the current narrative? The media’s adulation of Hockney as a symbol of triumph may be blinding us to the structural risks of a society that still tolerates discrimination in other forms. Social progress, like monetary policy, cannot be judged by its own press releases.
There is also the matter of fiscal responsibility. How many Hockneys did we lose to prison, exile or suicide? The Human Rights Watch estimates that between 1885 and 1967, thousands of men were convicted under anti-gay laws. Each one was a potential contributor to the tax base, a consumer of goods, a producer of culture. The opportunity cost is staggering. Our celebration of Hockney should therefore be tempered with a recognition that we are celebrating one survivor while ignoring the wiped-out portfolio of lost talent.
The Bottom Line
David Hockney’s ‘Gay Paradise’ is a masterpiece. But let’s not pretend it emerged from a permissive environment. It was painted in defiance of the law, in a market that penalised his identity. Today’s progressive accolades are a form of compensating variation: we pay for our virtue by claiming his success. From a purely analytical standpoint, the UK’s journey from criminalisation to celebration is a case study in regulatory reform. But reforms come with costs. We must remember that the gains we now enjoy were built on the backs of those who paid the price of non-compliance.
The real lesson for markets is this: never underestimate the resilience of human capital. Even under the most punitive regulations, value can be created. But the efficient allocation of talent requires eliminating barriers, not just lowering them. The government that criminalised Hockney was a bad regulator. The one that celebrates him is a rentier of his success. Both are guilty of the same sin: treating individuals as instruments of policy rather than sources of value.
As we display Hockney’s work in galleries, we should also scrutinise the balance sheet of progress. The liability side is heavy with regret. The asset side is bright with his colours. Let’s not confuse the two.








