Nov 05, 2013 - Sale 2329

Sale 2329 - Lot 211

Price Realized: $ 23,400
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 25,000 - $ 35,000
EDWARD HOPPER
Night Shadows.

Etching, 1921. 175x210 mm; 7x8 1/4 inches, full margins. Edition of approximately 500. Signed in pencil, lower right. Published by The New Republic, New York. A brilliant, luminous and richly-inked impression of this important etching, with strong contrasts and no sign of wear.

Based in New York, Hopper (1882-1967) studied at the NY Institute of Art and Design, where he was instructed by prominent artists like William Merrit Chase and by Robert Henri, a progenitor of the Ashcan School of American Art. Though he traveled to Europe several times in the early 1900s when avant-garde movements like Cubism and Surrealism were receiving much attention, he was not greatly swayed by their influence and instead was attracted to the iconic works and dark palette of Rembrandt and other Old Masters. Hopper's work is characterized by a sense of silence, stillness and isolation; he rarely depicted scenes that are chaotic or show any genuine camaraderie.

He began making etchings and drypoints in 1915 with the help of fellow artist Martin Lewis and he produced 70 prints before he ceased in 1928 to focus solely on painting. Night Shadows is a particularly iconic image, epitomizing Hopper's propensity for conveying isolation and stillness through the use of heavy chiaroscuro and strong, dark hatching throughout. He used a bird's-eye vantage point with extended shadows and darkness to intensify the still of the night. The artist depicted this same street corner in a painting from 1913, Corner Saloon, now in the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Unlike Hopper's other prints, which he printed himself on his personal press in very small editions, this is the only etching that was printed commercially for The New Republic, New York, and published in a limited edition portfolio for their December 1924 issue.

Hopper had only one painting, Sailing, 1911, in the Armory Show (it is now in the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh) and made very little impact on the public at the time. Levin 82.