Edward Hopper
Edward Hopper (July 22, 1882 – May 15, 1967)
was an American painter best remembered for his eerily realistic
depictions of solitude in contemporary American life.
Born in Nyack, New York, Hopper studied commercial
art and painting in New York City. One of his teachers, artist Robert
Henri, encouraged his students to use their art to "make a
stir in the world." Henri, an influence on Hopper, motivated
students to render realistic depictions of urban life. Henri's students,
many of whom developed into important artists, became known as the
Ashcan School of American art.
Upon completing his formal education, Hopper made
three trips to Europe to study the emerging art scene there, but
unlike many of his contemporaries who imitated the abstract cubist
experiments, the idealism of the realist painters enamored Hopper.
His early projects reflect the realist influence.
While he worked for several years as a commercial
artist, Hopper continued painting. In 1925 he produced House by
the Railroad, a classic work that marks his artistic maturity. The
piece is the first of a series of stark urban and rural scenes which
use sharp lines and large shapes, played upon by unusual lighting
to capture the lonely mood of his subjects. He derived his subject
matter from the common features of American life — gas stations,
motels, the railroad, or an empty street.
The best known of these paintings, Nighthawks (1942),
shows the lonely customers frequenting a downtown all-night diner.
The diner's harsh electric lights set it off from the gentle night
outside. The diners, seated at stools around the counter, are similarly
isolated from one another, leaving the viewer to wonder what led
them to the diner late at night.
Other examples include "Chop Suey", "Rooms
for Tourists", and "Office in a Small City".
Hopper's rural New England scenes, such as Gas
(1940), are no less wistful. In terms of subject matter, he can
be compared to his contemporary, Norman Rockwell, but while Rockwell
exalted in the rich imagery of small-town America, Hopper depicts
it in the same sense of forlorn solitude that permeates his portrayal
of city life. Here too, Hopper's work exploits vast empty spaces,
represented by a lonely gas station astride an empty country road
and the sharp contrast between the natural light of the sky, moderated
by the lush forest, and glaring artificial light coming from inside
the gas station.
Hopper died in 1967, in his studio near Washington
Square, in New York City. His wife, the painter Josephine Nivison
who died 10 months later, bequeathed his work to the Whitney Museum
of American Art. Other significant paintings by Hopper are at the
Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Art Institute of Chicago.
In 2004, a large selection of Hopper's paintings
toured through Europe, visiting Cologne, Germany and Tate Modern
in London. The Tate exhibition became the second most popular in
the gallery's history, with 420,000 visitors in the three months
it was open.
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