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Nyack New-York
22-7-1882 New York 15-5-67
"Edward Hopper, the best-known American realist of the inter-war period,
once said: 'The man's the work. Something doesn't come out of nothing.'
This offers a clue to interpreting the work of an artist who was not
only intensely private, but who made solitude and introspection
important themes in his painting.
"He was born in the small Hudson River town of Nyack, New York State, on
22 July 1882. His family were solidly middle-class: his father owned a
dry goods store where the young Hopper sometimes worked after school. By
1899 he had already decided to become an artist, but his parents
persuaded him to begin by studying commercial illustration because this
seemed to offer a more secure future. He first attended the New York
School of Illustrating (more obscure than its title suggests), then in
1900 transferred to the New York School of Art. Here the leading figure
and chief instructor was William Merritt Chase (1849-1916), an elegant
imitator of Sargent. He also worked under Robert Henri (1869-1929), one
of the fathers of American Realism - a man whom he later described as
'the most influential teacher I had', adding 'men didn't get much from
Chase; there were mostly women in the class.' Hopper was a slow
developer - he remained at the School of Art for seven years, latterly
undertaking some teaching work himself. However, like the majority of
the young American artists of the time, he longed to study in France.
With his parents' help he finally left for Paris in October 1906. This
was an exciting moment in the history of the Modern movement, but Hopper
was to claim that its effect on him was minimal: Whom did I meet?
Nobody. I'd heard of Gertrude Stein, but I don't remember having heard
of Picasso at all. I used to go to the cafés at night and sit and watch.
I went to the theatre a little. Paris had no great or immediate impact
on me.
"In addition to spending some months in Paris, he visited London,
Amsterdam, Berlin and Brussels. The picture that seems to have impressed
him most was Rembrandt's The Night Watch (in the Rijksmuseum,
Amsterdam). Hopper was able to repeat his trip to Europe in 1909 and
1910. On the second occasion he visited Spain as well as France. After
this, though he was to remain a restless traveller, he never set foot in
Europe again. Yet its influence was to remain with him for a long time:
he was well read in French literature, and could quote Verlaine in the
original, as his future wife discovered (he was surprised when she
finished the quotation for him). He said later: '[America] seemed
awfully crude and raw when I got back. It took me ten years to get over
Europe.' For some time his painting was full of reminiscences of what he
had seen abroad. This tendency culminates in Soir Bleu of 1914, a
recollection of the Mi-Caréme carnival in Paris, and one of the largest
pictures Hopper ever painted. It failed to attract any attention when he
showed it in a mixed exhibition in the following year, and it was this
failure which threw him back to working on the American subjects with
which his reputation is now associated. In 1913 Hopper made his first
sale - a picture exhibited at the Armory Show in New York which brought
together American artists and all the leading European modernists. In
1920 he had his first solo exhibition, at the Whitney Studio Club, but
on this occasion none of the paintings sold. He was already thirty-seven
and beginning to doubt if he would achieve any success as an artist - he
was still forced to earn a living as a commercial illustrator. One way
round this dilemma was to make prints, for which at that time there was
a rising new market. These sold more readily than his paintings, and
Hopper then moved to making watercolours, which sold more readily still.
"Hopper had settled in Greenwich Village, which was to be his base for
the rest of his life, and in 1923 he renewed his friendship with a
neighbour, Jo Nivison, whom he had known when they were fellow students
under Chase and Henri. She was now forty; Hopper was forty-two. In the
following year they married. Their long and complex relationship was to
be the most important of the artist's life. Fiercely loyal to her
husband, Jo felt in many respects oppressed by him. In particular, she
felt that he did nothing to encourage her own development as a painter,
but on the contrary did everything to frustrate it. 'Ed,' she confided
to her diary, 'is the very centre of my universe... If I'm on the point
of being very happy, he sees to it that I'm not.' The couple often
quarrelled fiercely (an early subject of contention was Jo's devotion to
her cat Arthur, whom Hopper regarded as a rival for her attention).
Sometimes their rows exploded into physical violence, and on one
occasion, just before a trip to Mexico, Jo bit Hopper's hand to the
bone. On the other hand, her presence was essential to his work,
sometimes literally so, since she now modelled for all the female
figures in his paintings, and was adept at enacting the various roles he
required.
"From the time of his marriage, Hopper's professional fortunes changed.
His second solo show, at the Rehn Gallery in New York in 1924, was a
sell-out. The following year, he painted what is now generally
acknowledged to be his first fully mature picture, The House by the
Railroad. With its deliberate, disciplined spareness, this is typical of
what he was to create thereafter. His paintings combine apparently
incompatible qualities. Modern in their bleakness and simplicity, they
are also full of nostalgia for the puritan virtues of the American past
- the kind of quirky nineteenth-century architecture Hopper liked to
paint, for instance, could not have been more out of fashion than it was
in the mid-192OS, when he first began to look at it seriously. Though
his compositions are supposedly realist they also make frequent use of
covert symbolism. Hopper's paintings have, in this respect, been rather
aptly compared to the realist plays of Ibsen, a writer whom he admired.
"One of the themes of The House by the Railroad is the loneliness of
travel, and the Hoppers now began to travel widely within the United
States, as well as going on trips to Mexico. Their mobility was made
possible by the fact that they were now sufficiently prosperous to buy a
car. This became another subject of contention between the artist and
his wife, since Hopper, not a good driver himself, resisted Jo's wish to
learn to drive too. She did not acquire a driving licence until 1936,
and even then her husband was extremely reluctant to allow her control
of their automobile.
"By this time Hopper, whose career, once it took off, was surprisingly
little affected by the Depression, had become extremely well known. In
1929, he was included in the Museum of Modern Art's second exhibition,
Paintings by Nineteen Living Americans, and in 1930 The House by the
Railroad entered the museum's permanent collection, as a gift from the
millionaire collector Stephen Clark. In the same year, the Whitney
Museum bought Hopper's Early Sunday Morning, its most expensive purchase
up to that time. In 1933 Hopper was given a retrospective exhibition at
the Museum of Modern Art. This was followed, in 1950, by a fuller
retrospective show at the Whitney.
"Hopper became a pictorial poet who recorded the starkness and vastness
of America. Sometimes he expressed aspects of this in traditional guise,
as, for example, in his pictures of lighthouses and harsh New England
landscapes; sometimes New York was his context, with eloquent
cityscapes, often showing deserted streets at night. Some paintings,
such as his celebrated image of a gas-station, Gas (1940), even have
elements which anticipate Pop Art. Hopper once said: 'To me the most
important thing is the sense of going on. You know how beautiful things
are when you're travelling.'
"He painted hotels, motels, trains and highways, and also liked to paint
the public and semi-public places where people gathered: restaurants,
theatres, cinemas and offices. But even in these paintings he stressed
the theme of loneliness - his theatres are often semideserted, with a
few patrons waiting for the curtain to go up or the performers isolated
in the fierce light of the stage. Hopper was a frequent movie-goer, and
there is often a cinematic quality in his work. As the years went on,
however, he found suitable subjects increasingly difficult to discover,
and often felt blocked and unable to paint. His contemporary the painter
Charles Burchfield wrote: 'With Hopper the whole fabric of his art seems
to be interwoven with his personal character and manner of living.' When
the link between the outer world he observed and the inner world of
feeling and fantasy broke, Hopper found he was unable to create.
"In particular, the rise of Abstract Expressionism left him marooned
artistically, for he disapproved of many aspects of the new art. He died
in 1967, isolated if not forgotten, and Jo Hopper died ten months later.
His true importance has only been fully realized in the years since his
death."
- Text from "Lives of the Great 20th-Century Artists", by Edward
Lucie-Smith
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