Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
arts

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Nighthawks (Hopper)

1942 painting by Edward Hopper

Nighthawks (Hopper)

Summary

1942 painting by Edward Hopper

FieldValue
suppressfieldscollection
mediumOil on canvas
image_size300px

Nighthawks is a 1942 oil on canvas painting by the American artist Edward Hopper that portrays four people in a downtown diner late at night as viewed through the diner's large glass window. The light coming from the diner illuminates a darkened and deserted urban streetscape.

The painting has been described as Hopper's best-known work and is one of the most recognizable paintings in American art. Classified as part of the American Realism movement, within months of its completion, it was sold to the Art Institute of Chicago for $3,000 ().

About the painting

It has been suggested that Hopper was inspired by a short story of Ernest Hemingway's, either "The Killers" (1927), which Hopper greatly admired, or the more philosophical "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place" (1933). In response to a query on loneliness and emptiness in the painting, Hopper said that he "didn't see it as particularly lonely". He said: "Unconsciously, probably, I was painting the loneliness of a large city."

Josephine Hopper's notes on the painting

Starting shortly after their marriage in 1924, Edward Hopper and his wife Josephine (Jo) kept a journal in which he would use a pencil, make a sketch-drawing of each of his paintings, along with a detailed description of specific technical details. Jo Hopper would then add additional information about the theme of the painting.

A review of the page on which Nighthawks is entered shows (in Edward Hopper's handwriting) that the intended name of the work was actually Night Hawks and that the painting was completed on January 21, 1942.

Jo's handwritten notes about the painting give considerably more detail, including the possibility that the painting's title may have had its origins as a reference to the beak-shaped nose of the man at the counter or that the appearance of one of the "nighthawks" was tweaked to relate to the original meaning of the word:

Very good looking blond boy in white (coat, cap) inside counter. Girl in red blouse, brown hair eating sandwich. Man night hawk (beak) in dark suit, steel grey hat, black band, blue shirt (clean) holding cigarette. Other figure dark sinister back—at left. Light side walk outside pale greenish. Darkish red brick houses opposite. Sign across top of restaurant, dark—Phillies 5¢ cigar. Picture of cigar. Outside of shop dark, green. Note: bit of bright ceiling inside shop against dark of outside street—at edge of stretch of top of window.}}

In January 1942, Jo confirmed her preference for the name. In a letter to Edward's sister, Marion, she wrote, "Ed has just finished a very fine picture—a lunch counter at night with 3 figures. Night Hawks would be a fine name for it. E. posed for the two men in a mirror and I for the girl. He was about a month and half working on it."

Ownership history

r=-1}}) going to the artist after commission and costs.

Upon completing the canvas in the late winter of 1941–42, Hopper placed it on display at Rehn's, the gallery at which his paintings were normally placed for sale. It remained there for about a month. On St. Patrick's Day, Edward and Jo Hopper attended the opening of an exhibit of the paintings of Henri Rousseau at New York's Museum of Modern Art, which had been organized by Daniel Catton Rich, the director of the Art Institute of Chicago. Rich was in attendance, along with Alfred Barr, the Museum of Modern Art director. Barr spoke enthusiastically of Gas, which Hopper had painted a year earlier, and "Jo told him he just had to go to Rehn's to see Nighthawks. In the event, it was Rich who went, pronounced Nighthawks 'fine as a [Winslow] Homer', and soon arranged its purchase for Chicago." It was sold on May 13, 1942, for $3,000 ().

Location of the restaurant

The scene was supposedly inspired by a diner (since demolished) in Greenwich Village, Hopper's neighborhood in Manhattan. Hopper himself said the painting "was suggested by a restaurant on Greenwich Avenue where two streets meet". Additionally, he noted that "I simplified the scene a great deal and made the restaurant bigger."

That reference led Hopper fans to engage in a search for the location of the original diner. The inspiration for the search was summed up in a 2010 blog of one of those searchers: "I am finding it extremely difficult to let go of the notion that the Nighthawks diner was a real diner, and not a total composite built of grocery stores, hamburger joints, and bakeries all cobbled together in the painter's imagination".

The spot often associated with the former location was a vacant lot known as Mulry Square, at the intersection of Seventh Avenue South, Greenwich Avenue, and West 11th Street, about seven blocks west of Hopper's studio on Washington Square. However, according to an article by Jeremiah Moss in The New York Times, that cannot be the location of the diner that inspired the painting because a gas station occupied that lot from the 1930s to the 1970s.

Moss located a land-use map in a 1950s municipal atlas showing that "Sometime between the late '30s and early '50s, a new diner appeared near Mulry Square". The diner was located immediately to the right of the gas station, "not in the empty northern lot, but on the southwest side, where Perry Street slants". That map is not reproduced in the Times article but is shown on Moss's blog.

Moss decided that Hopper should be taken at his word: the painting was merely "suggested" by a real-life restaurant, he had "simplified the scene a great deal", and he "made the restaurant bigger". In short, there probably never was a single real-life scene identical to the one that Hopper had created, and if one did exist, there is no longer sufficient evidence to pin down the precise location. Moss concluded, "the ultimate truth remains bitterly out of reach".

Notes

Bibliography

References

  1. Ian Chilvers and Harold Osborne (Eds.), ''The Oxford Dictionary of Art'' [[Oxford University Press]], 1997 (second edition), p. 273, {{ISBN. 0-19-860084-4 "The central theme of his work is the loneliness of city life, generally expressed through one or two figures in a spare setting - his best-known work, Nighthawks, has an unusually large 'cast' with four."
  2. [http://smarthistory.khanacademy.org/hoppers-nighthawks.html Hopper's Nighthawks], [[Smarthistory]] video, accessed April 29, 2013.
  3. Brooks, Katherine. (July 22, 2012). "Happy Birthday, Edward Hopper!". TheHuffingtonPost.com, Inc..
  4. [[Gail Levin (art historian). Gail Levin]] in "[http://faculty.baruch.cuny.edu/glevin/Gail%20Levin%20Interviewednew.htm Interview with Gail Levin]"
  5. Wagstaff 2004, p. 44
  6. Kuh, Katherine. (1962). "The Artist's Voice: Talks With Seventeen Artists". Harper & Row.
  7. Deborah Lyons, Edward Hopper: A Journal of His Work. New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, 1997, p. 63
  8. Jo Hopper, in a letter to Marion Hopper, January 22, 1942. Quoted in Gail Levin, ''Edward Hopper: An Intimate Biography.'' New York: Rizzoli, 2007, p. 349.
  9. Gail Levin, ''Edward Hopper: An Intimate Biography.'' New York: Rizzoli, 2007, pp. 351–352, citing Jo Hopper's diary entry for March 17, 1942.
  10. The sale was recorded by Josephine Hopper as follows, in volume II, p. 95 of her and Edward's journal of his art: "May 13, '42: Chicago Art Institute - 3,000 + return of Compartment C in exchange as part payment. 1,000 - 1/3 = 2,000." See Deborah Lyons, ''Edward Hopper: A Journal of His Work.'' New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, 1997, p. 63.
  11. Jeremiah Moss. (June 10, 2010). "Jeremiah's Vanishing New York: Finding Nighthawks, Coda". [[Jeremiah's Vanishing New York]].
  12. Moss, Jeremiah. (July 5, 2010). "Nighthawks State of Mind". The New York Times.
  13. Moss, Jeremiah. (June 9, 2010). "Finding Nighthawks, Part 3". Jeremiah's Vanishing New York (blog).
  14. Levin, 111–112.
  15. Levin, Gail. (1995). "Edward Hopper and the American Imagination". W. W. Norton.
  16. (October 15, 2013). "Boulevard of Broken Dreams II". Helnwein.com.
  17. Levin, 109–110.
  18. Levin, 116–123.
  19. Jury, Louise. (October 14, 2005). "Rats to the Arts Establishment". The Independent.
  20. (2019-01-16). "Prominent Santa Rosa murals to be demolished".
  21. Gemünden, 2–5, 15; quotation translated from the German by Gemünden.
  22. Updike, John. (2005). "Still Looking: Essays on American Art". Knopf.
  23. (4 December 2016). "Anthology inspired by Hopper's untold tales". The Independent.
  24. Gemünden, 5–6.
  25. (December 5, 2010). "Book Review: Coast of Chicago by Stuart Dybek".
  26. Koenig, John. (2021). "The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows". Simon & Schuster.
  27. Gemünden, Gerd. (1998). "Framed Visions: Popular Culture, Americanization, and the Contemporary German and Austrian Imagination". University of Michigan Press.
  28. Doss, Erika. (1983). "Edward Hopper, Nighthawks, and Film Noir". Post Script: Essays in Film and the Humanities.
  29. Doss, 36.
  30. Berman, Avis. (2007). "Hopper". Smithsonian.
  31. Arouet, Carole. (2001). "Glengarry Glen Ross ou l'autopsie de l'image modèle de l'économie américaine". La Voix du Regard.
  32. "Rotospective: Ralph Bakshi's Heavy Traffic is High on Detail, Consistency and Realism - Agent Palmer".
  33. Sammon, Paul M.. (1996). "Future Noir: the Making of Blade Runner". HarperPrism.
  34. "Dark City". ebertfest.com.
  35. Chambers, Bill. "Film Freak Central".
  36. (2009-05-28). "Deconstructing "Night at the Museum"".
  37. "Five Charming Inaccuracies in 'Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian' DVD". Washington Post.
  38. Thiesen, 10; Reynolds, E25.
  39. "Biography".
  40. (August 5, 2013). "Premiere: OMD, 'Night Café' (Vile Electrodes 'B-Side the C-Side' Remix)".
  41. Johnson, Jerusha. "This is the world we know, the world of air and breathing and sun and beating hearts".
  42. "Verdi's Rigoletto at ENO".
  43. Theisen, Gordon. (2006). "Staying Up Much Too Late: Edward Hopper's Nighthawks and the Dark Side of the American Psyche". Thomas Dunne Books.
  44. Slezak, Michael. (2015-09-11). "Fresh Off the Boat's Season 2 Poster: The Huangs Give Us an Art-Attack".
  45. (2007-06-14). "Exopolis Revives Vintage Edward Hopper Inspired Promo for Turner Classic Movies".
  46. McNutt, Myles. (2021-03-28). "Shameless' end-of-life storytelling continues to disappoint, not that we expected otherwise".
  47. Pai, Akshay. (2020-01-06). "Nighthawks: How one painting came to heavily influence pop-culture, TV, cinema, and music".
  48. (1998-11-15). "Drive-In".
  49. 100 Meisterwerke, Vol. 4, Chapter 10: Art Institute of Chicago
  50. Reynolds, Christopher. (September 23, 2006). "Lives of a Diner". Los Angeles Times.
  51. Levin, 125–126; Thiesen, 10.
  52. (1997). "Parody: Dimensions and Perspectives". Rodopi.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Nighthawks (Hopper) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report