High Noon (1949)
Night Windows (1928)
Rooms By the Sea (1951)
Summer Evening (1949)
Nighthawks (1942)
House by the Railroad (1925)
New York Office (1962)
Morning Sun (1952)
New York Movie (1939)
Office in a Small City (1953)
Edward Hopper (July 22, 1882 – May 15, 1967)
Hopper was fascinated by what isn’t available to our senses. In his mysterious paintings, he makes felt what isn’t there, the nothing, the nothing that isn’t there. He was known to be solitary and thoughtful, like the blond woman in New York Movie. In the forties and fifties, it was easier to appreciate solitude than it is today. Hopper painted public places, rooms where people gathered, but usually with a few people or nobody in the rooms. Few people in those days went to museums during the week, and the galleries might be vacant.
You could stand before a painting for long minutes and not hear voices. There was silence in those days. It was associated with solitude, sacredness, internal life.
Leonard Michaels, “The Nothing That Isn’t There”