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Hopper & Cape Ann

Illuminating an American Landscape


  • Rizzoli
  • Expo: 22/06/2023 - 16/10/2023, Cape Ann Museum, Gloucester, Massachusetts.
  • by Elliot Bostwick Davis
A fresh look at one of America's best-known and beloved artists at a pivotal but little-known moment in his life that profoundly shaped both his art and career. Edward Hopper & Cape Ann tells the largely ignored but significant origin story of Edward Hopper's years in and around Gloucester, Massachusetts - a period and place that imbued Hopper's paintings with a clarity and purpose that had eluded his earlier work and set the stage for his monumental career.

ISBN 9780847899340 | EN | HB
€64,50
available
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More Information
Publisher Rizzoli
ISBN 9780847899340
Author(s) by Elliot Bostwick Davis
Publication date May 2023
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 291 x 262 mm
Illustrations 175 col.ill.
Pages 224
Language(s) English ed.
Exhibition Cape Ann Museum, Gloucester, Massachusetts.
Description

A fresh look at one of America's best-known and beloved artists at a pivotal but little-known moment in his life that profoundly shaped both his art and career.

Edward Hopper & Cape Ann tells the largely ignored but significant origin story of Edward Hopper's years in and around Gloucester, Massachusetts - a period and place that imbued Hopper's paintings with a clarity and purpose that had eluded his earlier work. This volume focuses on summers Hopper spent there in the 1920s, starting in 1923, when he first embraced watercolor during outdoor painting excursions on Cape Ann and discovered one of his favorite subjects: houses and vernacular architecture. The success of Hopper's Gloucester watercolors transformed his work in all media and set the stage for his monumental career.

Accompanying a major retrospective at the Cape Ann Museum, including an unprecedented loan of twenty-eight works from the Whitney Museum of American Art, this highly readable and beautifully illustrated volume reveals in great depth the lesser-known story about the influence of a young painter, Josephine Nivison, who became not only Hopper's wife but also the most trusted force underlying his artistic confidence. Here she is recast as principal producer of Hopper's distinctive style and his "brand" visionary from the time of their courtship until his death in 1967.