Edward Hopper

East Side Interior
1922

Not on view

Date
1922

Classification
Prints

Medium
Etching

Dimensions
Sheet (Irregular): 13 1/2 × 18in. (34.3 × 45.7 cm) Plate: 7 7/8 × 9 13/16in. (20 × 24.9 cm)

Accession number
70.1020

Credit line
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Josephine N. Hopper Bequest

Rights and reproductions
© Heirs of Josephine N. Hopper/Licensed by Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

API
artworks/7000

Although Edward Hopper is best known for his oils and watercolors, he focused on printmaking from 1915 to 1923 to support himself through the early years of his artistic career. Hopper became an accomplished etcher, and it was his prints that first gained him public recognition. In East Side Interior, a young mother with a baby carriage sits at a sewing machine and gazes out the window. Hopper used the stark light from the window to animate the surfaces of the interior space and imbue the scene with dramatic tension. In 1956, Hopper wrote about the source of this etching as ". . . memories of glimpses of rooms seen from the streets in the eastside in my walks in that part of the city. No implication was intended with any ideology concerning the poor and oppressed. The interior itself was my main interest—simply a piece of New York, the city that interests me so much. . ."




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