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Edward Hopper
"Night Hawks"

This art print is:

  • NEW 
  • Plate Signed
  • CUSTOM FRAMED in a two toned gold/ brown wood frame
  • Single matted in white with a black core v-groove
  • Offset Lithograph
  • Framed Size: 44" x 28"
  • Image Size: 18" x 35"
  • Ready to Hang 
  • Interested in different framing? Contact us!

FRAMING ALONE IS WORTH OVER $295!

BIOGRAPHY
Artist Edward Hopper was the painter behind the iconic late-night diner scene Nighthawks (1942), among other celebrated works.
 

Synopsis

Born in 1882, Edward Hopper trained as an illustrator and devoted much of his early career to advertising and etchings. Influenced by the Ashcan School and taking up residence in New York City, Hopper began to paint the commonplaces of urban life with still, anonymous figures, and compositions that evoke a sense of loneliness. His famous works include House by the Railroad (1925), Automat (1927) and the iconic Nighthawks (1942). Hopper died in 1967.

Early Life by the Hudson

Edward Hopper was born on July 22, 1882, in Nyack, New York, a small shipbuilding community on the Hudson River. The younger of two children in an educated middle-class family, Hopper was encouraged in his intellectual and artistic pursuits and by the age of 5 was already exhibiting a natural talent. He continued to develop his abilities during grammar school and high school, working in a range of media and forming an early love for impressionism and pastoral subject matter. Among his earliest signed works is an 1895 oil painting of a rowboat. Before deciding to pursue his future in fine art, Hopper imagined a career as a nautical architect.

 
 
 

After graduating in 1899, Hopper briefly participated in a correspondence course in illustration before enrolling at the New York School of Art and Design, where he studied with teachers such as impressionist William Merritt Chase and Robert Henri of the so-called Ashcan School, a movement that stressed realism in both form and content.

Darkness and Light

Having completed his studies, in 1905 Hopper found work as an illustrator for an advertising agency. Although he found the work creatively stifling and unfulfilling, it would be the primary means by which he would support himself while continuing to create his own art. He was also able to make several trips abroad—to Paris in 1906, 1909 and 1910 as well as Spain in 1910—experiences that proved pivotal in the shaping of his personal style. Despite the rising popularity of such abstract movements as cubism and fauvism in Europe, Hopper was most taken by the works of the impressionists, particularly those of Claude Monet and Edouard Manet, whose use of light would have a lasting influence on Hopper’s art. Some works from this period include his Bridge in Paris (1906), Louvre and Boat Landing (1907) and Summer Interior (1909).

Edward Hopper "Night Hawks" New CUSTOM FRAMED Art

SKU: HOPR024MJ-E
$189.99Price
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