Happy Monday, Artsies! Hope everyone had a wonderful holiday weekend. This week’s Masterworks Monday artist is one of my all-time faves, American Realist painter Edward Hopper. A feeling of melancholy tends to pervade most of Hopper’s work, but maybe that is why they appeal to me. His scenes seem so very real, not just in their sense of time and of place, but in the capturing of a moment. Early mornings in small towns DO feel desolate, being an attendant at a gas station on a far off country road WOULD be lonely.
Early Sunday Morning by Edward Hopper
Image via Whitney Museum of American Art
Gas by Edward Hopper
Image via Museum of Modern Art
Don’t you want to know what’s going on with this young blonde movie usher? Is she sad? Is she contemplating making a change in her life?
New York Movie by Edward Hopper
Image via Museum of Modern Art
Despite the lone figures or desolate landscapes, Hopper’s images are filled with light and in that, create a sense of hope within the isolation. Early morning means it is a new day.. light coming in a window means that there is an escape from the darkness. Whether this is what Hopper intended or not, it is what I personally take from his work.
Morning Sun by Edward Hopper
Image via The New York Times
How about you? What do you see in Hopper’s work? How does it make you feel?


























I have a weakness for Abstract Expressionism. I’m not sure what it is about the paintings of that time and the artists who created them, but there is just something about these works that move me. Maybe it is the experimentation, or the emotionality behind them or the rebellion against a post-WWII saccharine society.











