logging in or signing up Edward Hopper mjarry Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINT lite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 871 Category: Education License: All Rights Reserved Like it (2) Dislike it (0) Added: November 01, 2008 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript Edward Hopper : Edward Hopper Edward Hopper (1882 –1967 ) : Edward Hopper (1882 –1967 ) Hopper was a part of the Ashcan School of American Realism. Studied under Robert Henri (trailblazer of American Realism). His paintings focus on theme of loneliness and solitude of America during the interwar years the Depression years. Hopper’s work doesn’t idealise nor satirise middle-class America, rather it offers us a view into what middle-America was like, which could explain why his work resonates so well with audiences. He had travelled to Europe during the early 20th century and got to see the works of the abstract masters (Picasso et al.) but European Realism resonated more with Hooper. Slide 3: Edward Hopper Nighthawks (1942) Oil on Canvas Nighthawks : Nighthawks This was one of Hopper’s most important and memorable works. It was painted in Greenwich Village, NYC near Hopper’s neighbourhood. The objects within the work (coffee urns, water glasses, bar stool) are painted with ‘deadpan’ precision and echo the loneliness of the customers in the café. It is as if the objects themselves are customers as well. What is interesting about this work is that we, as the audience, are looking into this scene with a sense of wonder and curiosity. Who are these people? What is their relation to one another? What time of night was this painted? Slide 5: Edward Hopper New York Movie (1939) Oil on Canvas Slide 6: Edward Hopper A Woman in the Sun (1961) Oil on Canvas Slide 7: Edward Hopper Chair Car (1965) Oil on Canvas Hopper’s Work : Hopper’s Work Now iconoclastic, his works have a sense of an autobiographical nature. They tell the story of one man’s life in observation in America. His works express both a sense of urban isolation and the bittersweet comfort of being alone. Many of Hopper’s works that are done with a sense of complete observation, often the subjects are unaware of the artist being present. What is also interesting in Hopper’s work is it’s ability to create interest in the audience to some of the most mundane scenes. During his time in Europe he spent a lot of time wandering around, not soaking up the culture but observing the things he saw. Some critics liken Hoppers work to that of the Dutch Renaissance painter Rembrandt van Rijn. Slide 9: Rembrandt van Rijn The Company of Frans Banning Cock Preparing to March Out (The Nightwatch) (1642) Oil on canvas Slide 10: Edward Hopper The Lighthouse at Two Lights (1929) Oil on Canvas Slide 11: Edward Hopper Bootleggers (date unknown) Oil on Canvas Edward Hopper Night Shadows (1921) Etching Slide 12: Edward Hopper Corn Hill (Truro, Cape Cod) (1930) Oil on canvas Slide 13: Edward Hopper The Mansard Roof (1923) Watercolour on paper Hopper’s Landscapes : Hopper’s Landscapes Like his paintings of people, his landscapes capture the sense of loneliness. There is always a sense of the human element with his works and a sense of stoicism, we almost feel the emptiness and can identify with it, yet we are not saddened by the emptiness. The Mansard Roof was Hopper’s breakthrough painting, it was his first commercially successful work and sold for $100 to the Brooklyn Museum. His landscapes were a documentation of his travels around the eastern US. Hopper said of his work, “ to me the most important thing is the sense of going on. You know how beautiful things are when you're travelling.” Slide 15: Edward Hopper Early Sunday Morning (1930) Oil on canvas Slide 16: Edward Hopper People in the Sun (1960) You do not have the permission to view this presentation. In order to view it, please contact the author of the presentation.
Edward Hopper mjarry Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINT lite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 871 Category: Education License: All Rights Reserved Like it (2) Dislike it (0) Added: November 01, 2008 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript Edward Hopper : Edward Hopper Edward Hopper (1882 –1967 ) : Edward Hopper (1882 –1967 ) Hopper was a part of the Ashcan School of American Realism. Studied under Robert Henri (trailblazer of American Realism). His paintings focus on theme of loneliness and solitude of America during the interwar years the Depression years. Hopper’s work doesn’t idealise nor satirise middle-class America, rather it offers us a view into what middle-America was like, which could explain why his work resonates so well with audiences. He had travelled to Europe during the early 20th century and got to see the works of the abstract masters (Picasso et al.) but European Realism resonated more with Hooper. Slide 3: Edward Hopper Nighthawks (1942) Oil on Canvas Nighthawks : Nighthawks This was one of Hopper’s most important and memorable works. It was painted in Greenwich Village, NYC near Hopper’s neighbourhood. The objects within the work (coffee urns, water glasses, bar stool) are painted with ‘deadpan’ precision and echo the loneliness of the customers in the café. It is as if the objects themselves are customers as well. What is interesting about this work is that we, as the audience, are looking into this scene with a sense of wonder and curiosity. Who are these people? What is their relation to one another? What time of night was this painted? Slide 5: Edward Hopper New York Movie (1939) Oil on Canvas Slide 6: Edward Hopper A Woman in the Sun (1961) Oil on Canvas Slide 7: Edward Hopper Chair Car (1965) Oil on Canvas Hopper’s Work : Hopper’s Work Now iconoclastic, his works have a sense of an autobiographical nature. They tell the story of one man’s life in observation in America. His works express both a sense of urban isolation and the bittersweet comfort of being alone. Many of Hopper’s works that are done with a sense of complete observation, often the subjects are unaware of the artist being present. What is also interesting in Hopper’s work is it’s ability to create interest in the audience to some of the most mundane scenes. During his time in Europe he spent a lot of time wandering around, not soaking up the culture but observing the things he saw. Some critics liken Hoppers work to that of the Dutch Renaissance painter Rembrandt van Rijn. Slide 9: Rembrandt van Rijn The Company of Frans Banning Cock Preparing to March Out (The Nightwatch) (1642) Oil on canvas Slide 10: Edward Hopper The Lighthouse at Two Lights (1929) Oil on Canvas Slide 11: Edward Hopper Bootleggers (date unknown) Oil on Canvas Edward Hopper Night Shadows (1921) Etching Slide 12: Edward Hopper Corn Hill (Truro, Cape Cod) (1930) Oil on canvas Slide 13: Edward Hopper The Mansard Roof (1923) Watercolour on paper Hopper’s Landscapes : Hopper’s Landscapes Like his paintings of people, his landscapes capture the sense of loneliness. There is always a sense of the human element with his works and a sense of stoicism, we almost feel the emptiness and can identify with it, yet we are not saddened by the emptiness. The Mansard Roof was Hopper’s breakthrough painting, it was his first commercially successful work and sold for $100 to the Brooklyn Museum. His landscapes were a documentation of his travels around the eastern US. Hopper said of his work, “ to me the most important thing is the sense of going on. You know how beautiful things are when you're travelling.” Slide 15: Edward Hopper Early Sunday Morning (1930) Oil on canvas Slide 16: Edward Hopper People in the Sun (1960)