Edward Hopper's career soared while his wife Jo Nivison's faltered. When Edward Hopper first met fellow painter and future spouse Josephine Nivison in 1923, he had not sold a painting in 10 years. Jo, ...
Directors Michael Cascio and Phil Grabsky’s documentary explores the relationships in Edward Hopper’s life, shaping some of America’s most famous paintings. I was a fan of Edward Hopper well before ...
For Edward Hopper, a rugged coastline or rural highway could be as psychologically charged as a café at night or a deserted city street. But the American artist’s landscapes tend to get overshadowed ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The Edward Hopper House Museum in Nyack is celebrating 55 years since it was founded. In 1971, a group of neighbors saved the ...
When Edward Hopper’s retrospective at Tate Modern in London closed in September 2004, more than 420,000 tickets had been sold. Up to that point, only the acclaimed duo of Matisse and Picasso had beat ...
An unprecedented retrospective of Edward Hopper’s work will focus on his life in New York City. Edward Hopper’s New York will open on October 19, 2022 at the Whitney Museum of American Art and run ...
People never smile in the paintings of Edward Hopper (1882-1967). Lonely men in shirt sleeves sit on the curb outside vacant stores, peering down at the cracked pavement (“Sunday,” 1926), or they prop ...
To celebrate Edward Hopper’s 142nd birthday, the Whitney Museum of American Art hosted its second annual bike ride to the artist's birthplace. Cyclists in front of the Edward Hopper House, Nyack, New ...
One painting on the map that is particularly unique is Hopper’s painting of the lost Loew’s Sheridan Theater. Opened in September 1921, the 2,342-seat theatre stood at 7th Avenue and West 12th Street.
Edward Hopper, Automat, 1927. Oil on canvas, 28 1/8 × 35 in. (71.4 × 88.9 cm). Des Moines Art Center, Des Moines, Iowa; purchased with funds from the Edmundson Art Foundation, Inc. Seated alone, an ...
The end of the pandemic in New York has been declared so many times—I have heralded many a false spring myself—and each time with a stumbling, unhappy one-step-forward, one-step-back rhythm, that to ...
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