Artist Edward Hopper and Portrayals of Women in Paintings | art stream pt. 16

About the work

Edward Hopper (July 22, 1882 – May 15, 1967) was a prominent American realist painter and printmaker. While he was most popularly known for his oil paintings, he was equally proficient as a watercolorist and printmaker in etching. Both in his urban and rural scenes, his spare and finely calculated renderings reflected his personal vision of modern American life.

Always reluctant to discuss himself and his art, Hopper simply said, “The whole answer is there on the canvas.” Hopper was stoic and fatalistic—a quiet introverted man with a gentle sense of humor and a frank manner. Hopper was someone drawn to an emblematic, anti-narrative symbolism, who “painted short isolated moments of configuration, saturated with suggestion”. His silent spaces and uneasy encounters “touch us where we are most vulnerable”, and have “a suggestion of melancholy, that melancholy being enacted”. His sense of color revealed him as a pure painter as he “turned the Puritan into the purist, in his quiet canvasses where blemishes and blessings balance”. According to critic Lloyd Goodrich, he was “an eminently native painter, who more than any other was getting more of the quality of America into his canvases”.

Artist Edward Hopper and Portrayals of Women in Paintings | art stream pt. 16 is available in the public domain via Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported .

Source:

Source: YouTube

Save this work.

Start an account to add this work to your personal curated collection.

masonry card

Is something missing?

Help us to improve our content.

We're just getting started!

Sign Up to receive updates.

Curationist connects people to cultural knowledge from all over the world.