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Yale Acquires Important Edward Hopper Drawings

Edward Hopper, study for "Western Motel,” 1957, charcoal and graphite. Yale University Art Gallery, Everett V. Meeks, BA 1901, Fund.
Edward Hopper, study for "Western Motel,” 1957, charcoal and graphite. Yale University Art Gallery, Everett V. Meeks, BA 1901, Fund.
:The Yale University Art Gallery has purchased important preparatory drawings by American artist Edward Hopper for two of his celebrated paintings, "Rooms by the Sea," 1951, and "Western Motel," 1957, both in the gallery's collection. The drawings related to "Rooms by the Sea" are rendered on two sides of a single sheet of paper, while the sheet related to "Western Motel" contains a single sketch. Each of the drawings provides rare insight into the evolution of the related painting.

Preparatory studies for Hopper's paintings are particularly important, since by the time the artist took brush to canvas he had worked through most of the compositional problems (x-rays of these canvases only rarely show any alterations).

"Rooms by the Sea," widely recognized as one of Hopper's most mysterious works, is one of only three known Hopper interiors without figures. Suggested by a view from the house that Hopper and his wife, Jo, built on a bluff overlooking the bay at Truro, on Cape Cod, Mass., the painting depicts a room whose door opens — seemingly directly — onto the ocean. Although glimpses of furnishings in a back room imply a human presence, Hopper's primary interest in the painting seems to be the shaft of bright sunlight that falls across the wall and floor of the bare front room, yielding an image that evokes feelings of both profound silence and unease.

Edward Hopper, "Western Motel,” 1957, oil on canvas. Yale University Art Gallery, bequest of Stephen Carlton Clark, BA 1903.
Edward Hopper, "Western Motel,” 1957, oil on canvas. Yale University Art Gallery, bequest of Stephen Carlton Clark, BA 1903.
The studies for "Rooms by the Sea" open a window into Hopper's creative process. His initial concept is represented by the simple view on the verso of the sheet, showing an open door, a wall, a floor and a glimpse of the space outside the house.

The fuller study on the recto adds a number of details, including a framed picture on the front wall, a rug in front of the open door and, in the rear room, a sofa and a round table. In the painting, Hopper pares the composition to its essential details, moving the framed picture to the back room, removing the rug, repositioning the door from the left to the right side of the jamb and replacing the round table with a rectilinear dresser. The end result is an enigmatic and haunting image of a sun-struck interior.

"Western Motel" pictures a woman seated on the edge of a bed in an unadorned motel room, looking directly out at the viewer. Two packed suitcases at the lower left corner of the composition and a robe thrown over the arm of the chair at the lower right suggest that the woman has either just arrived or is just preparing to depart. A large picture-window looks out onto the windshield of a Buick and the profile of buttes beyond. As with the earlier painting, "Western Motel" is marked by simple lines and a stark geometry of light and dark.

Edward Hopper, study for "Rooms by the Sea” (recto), 1951, charcoal. Yale University Art Gallery, Katharine Ordway Fund.
Edward Hopper, study for "Rooms by the Sea” (recto), 1951, charcoal. Yale University Art Gallery, Katharine Ordway Fund.
The study for "Western Motel" shows two seated figures at the left and one at the far right, in what appears to be a motel lobby. A picture window looks out onto a sign atop a tall post and the front of a car against a landscape. The vista continues through a second picture window at the left, balanced by a solid wood door at the right.

Once again, in creating his painting, Hopper altered and stripped away details included in the study. Most notably, three figures have been reduced to one, and a motel lobby space has become a motel room. The picture window occupying the left wall of the sketch has become a solid wall in the painting, highlighted by a shaft of bright light, and the solid wood door at the right has become a glass door.

Yale University Art Gallery is at the corner of Chapel and York Streets. For information, www.artgallery.yale.edu or 203-432-0600.

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for 11/21/2009
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