Edward Hopper's Nighthawks | Art Institute Essentials Tour

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • On this episode of Art Institute Essentials Tour, take a closer look at Nighthawks, painted by Edward Hopper in 1942.
    Inspired by “a restaurant on New York’s Greenwich Avenue where two streets meet,” Hopper's painting, one of the best-known images of 20th-century art, has a timeless, universal quality that transcends locale.
    Keep reading and learn more about Nighthawks on our artwork page:
    www.artic.edu/...

Комментарии • 30

  • @christophaltmann8711
    @christophaltmann8711 3 года назад +5

    This iconic picture deserves a better frame.

    • @electrictroy2010
      @electrictroy2010 2 года назад

      Like what? It’s the frame Mr. Hopper installed himself when he sold it

  • @merlinjones6485
    @merlinjones6485 3 года назад +2

    They had this on Jeopardy so I had to look it up. WOW! If you stare long enough at this picture it will swallow you up into a different era.
    A great, Great, GREAT artist showed me this masterpiece, and I'm glad he did.

    • @jessislistless
      @jessislistless 2 года назад

      Really?! I thought it was just me but it's so true. Something about Edward hoppers painting just engulfs me before I even realise it's happening

    • @merlinjones6485
      @merlinjones6485 2 года назад +1

      @@jessislistless In a crowd we become insignificant and blend into the hive of noisy bees. But at four in the morning, here, with less than a handful of people, your importance is exaggerated. Ever word you say is listened to. Every thing you wear is a statement.
      It would be great to slip into this painting, to get away from our problems, just for a while, and try their aromatic coffee. I can smell it, and so can you if you try.

    • @electrictroy2010
      @electrictroy2010 2 года назад

      TCM has used this scene as a TV intro since the 1990s. They air it during the pre-dawn hours (2am to 5am)
      * Turner Classic Movies (US cable channel)

    • @cheaserceaser
      @cheaserceaser Год назад

      It was a bad era, raci's era. No Alphabet people, BLM.

  • @lalalafalala
    @lalalafalala 6 месяцев назад

    The painting pushes you back to the surface?? There's no sense of depth?! Is she crazy? The depth is what makss this painting so captivating, it draws you in. The everydayness of it?! I can't.

  • @maxcohen13
    @maxcohen13 4 года назад +4

    Edward Hopper is clearly a national treasure and a true artist. The curator speaking is everything wrong with art today and exactly why we will never be allowed to have someone like Hopper ever again in America. Postmodernism murdered beauty.

    • @raystaar
      @raystaar 2 года назад +1

      Would you mind expanding on your comment about the curator's remarks and their broader implications for the future of art in the U.S.? Thank you.

    • @electrictroy2010
      @electrictroy2010 2 года назад

      TCM has used this scene as a TV intro since the 1990s. They air it during the pre-dawn hours (2am to 5am)
      * Turner Classic Movies (US cable channel)

  • @BGTuyau
    @BGTuyau Год назад

    Great footage of Manhattan in the '30s -depicting scenes, even if far busier, from what could have been Hopper's world- and common-sense commentary from The AIC curator. If you can, go see this icon of American art of its time.

  • @tungs1065
    @tungs1065 4 года назад +3

    I am always struck by the enormous size of the piece of glass in the foreground. It would be difficult for such a huge piece of glass to be installed, Yet the viewer looks at it and it seems perfectly normal. And the glass is curved!! It may be quite possible, but I don't think it is very easy to do.

    • @ravenswood118
      @ravenswood118 3 года назад +1

      Larger pieces of glass have been installed.

    • @electrictroy2010
      @electrictroy2010 2 года назад

      Except this is 1940 when making that large a piece of glass was never done

  • @skeletonentertainment4201
    @skeletonentertainment4201 3 года назад +2

    1:20 that door leads to the kitchen? I've always assumed this one part we see is actually just some sort bar section that's just apart of an even bigger diner we aren't shown

    • @royfr8136
      @royfr8136 3 года назад +1

      kitchen

    • @EddJones25
      @EddJones25 3 года назад +2

      you tend to only see those sort of small windows on doors to a kitchen, not doors for the public to use

  • @crimony3054
    @crimony3054 3 года назад +3

    I always thought the painting conveyed urban tranquility, too often an oxymoron.

  • @RichMitch
    @RichMitch 4 года назад +2

    Always found Hopper to be relativistic. Doesn't matter how close or far away you get, he's always *just* out of reach. One step removed. Accessible but never attainable. Comes through in everything he did and said.

  • @Pallidus_Rider
    @Pallidus_Rider Год назад

    Where are the ashtrays? 🤔

  • @nikczemna_symulakra
    @nikczemna_symulakra Год назад

    That frame though.. you can't not see it, it's gaudy. Raping the eye, in a sense.

  • @booker0110
    @booker0110 4 месяца назад

    Sorry to be a pedant but you said “the heavy duty porcelain mugs.” You obviously meant “pottery mugs”. Porcelain is the finest, most wonderful, most fragile of the clays.

  • @lazur1
    @lazur1 4 года назад +2

    No door. Diner Hell? Is this inspiration for the many strangely-empty bars & diners in films? Real-life, they'd be out of business from lack of business.

    • @verhu010
      @verhu010 4 года назад

      The door couldn't be out of view to the right? Also many places stay in business because of very busy periods during breakfast/lunch/dinner and stay open late despite small crowds.

    • @lazur1
      @lazur1 4 года назад

      @@verhu010 The door _could_ be out of sight, but if so, it's _purposely_ out of sight. This painting itself could fit your 'busy times', hypothesis, but the similar scenes in films have occurred at all times of day.

    • @electrictroy2010
      @electrictroy2010 2 года назад

      TCM has used this scene as a TV intro since the 1990s. They air it during the pre-dawn hours (2am to 5am)
      * Turner Classic Movies (US cable channel)

  • @richardwilson6576
    @richardwilson6576 7 месяцев назад +1

    The lady who describes Nighthawks...is overtop in her "personal" assessment of what is going on...no door? Pretty easy to know that the door, unseen, would be to the right and the rest of her comments...not good.

  • @Anathos075
    @Anathos075 4 года назад +2

    WOUAW QUESQUE C'EST QUE CE TRUC LA ?

  • @lupinbrabablebix9840
    @lupinbrabablebix9840 Год назад

    What about: these people are dead , the diner is some kind of purgatory and the skull like figure in white is the angel of death running the show from behind the counter. The narrow yellow door is the door out, they are all waiting on a decision about what happens next