– The power of simple bright colours and a brisk contrast of light and shadows is quite evident in most of Edward Hopper’s mature work –from the mid 1920s onwards– and even before, in the early 1910s, in his first outdoor paintings in America. Oils like New York Restaurant (1922) or Chop Suey (1927) are perfect examples of this fact.
In his extended –though intermittent– work as advertising illustrator, he turned the restrictions and requirements of the media and the printing limitations of his time into virtue, attaining some striking effects. Perhaps there is no clearer instance than his image for The American Locomotive Company (ALCO), published in 1944.
Besides the masterly composition, the pride and positivity (and hope!) embodied by the ‘dad and son’ couple, and of course the powerful beauty of the locomotive itself, the colours are the undisputed protagonists; red, cyan, green, purple, bright white jump to our eyes and captivate our brains.
To me, this picture expresses like few others the best spirit of the US in those times, near the end of WWII (a spirit that my elders admired with reason, but seems vanished or gone strayed nowadays – A pity.)
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Here I add the splendid full-page advertisement with the caption and emblem of the ALCO, as it appeared on magazines:
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[This is a ninth post in a series about Edward Hopper on this blog (among others on American Visual Arts); you may find the previous ones using the search window on “Home”]
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Dear Li — your Hopper posts are super. Thanks! I love him too.
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Oh!!! This is very kind of you, Roger 🙂 But not really deserved: I’m very aware that my English is not good enough to express my views as I would. Anyway I do love Hopper’s work as well as you since I was a child (my daddy’s influence, like in so many other things :))
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I have a huge collection of Hoppers works (Books, poster) But never saw this one.
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I’m glad you found it here on my blog, then :))
Best regards ✨
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Hi,
As a French student, I am preparing a thesis about train and American art and would really much appreciate if you could share the exact references of the original source you took these great illustration from.
Thanks in advance and kind regards,
Louise
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Hi Louise 🙂 Thanks for the comment. As for the illustration, I do not keep more references than those written on my post. Anyway, this was an advertisement that appeared in several (perhaps many) magazines at the time, and the pic I show is just a scan of one of them.
Also, if you are interested about trains as an art subject, you will find quite a lot of oils, drawings and etchings by Hopper himself depicting trains, railways and railway stations, be it around the Web or on this same blog (if you use the search window on it).
Kind regards back to you 🙂
LiF
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This isn’t an Edward Hopper illustration. Plus it’s not in the Catalogue Raisonne.
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Hem… Then who’s the author according to you?
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