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Past Exhibitions
Edward Hopper's Women focuses on a small interconnected group of paintings that set the course of this artist's successful career as a painter of the modern American scene. At the center of the group is the artist's famous Chop Suey (1929), which is among the very first of Hopper's paintings of the modern urban scene. Hopper revealed himself an uncommonly close observer of people and places when in the 1920s he studied the interiors of New York restaurants and focused on the young women clientele that typically frequented these places. It was with Chop Suey and related paintings that Hopper found his most potent, enigmatic subject in the American city–the modern American woman. What Hopper created in these early New York paintings was a look at a social dynamic that was reshaping the urban scene–the influx of young women into the modern work-a-day world. The exhibition brings together a group of paintings that shows Chop Suey as a part of an extended narrative of human vulnerability that evolved as Hopper studied women in new kinds of social spaces in New York. –Patricia Junker, Curator of American Art
Educational Resources ![]() Chop Suey, 1929, Edward Hopper, American, 1882–1967, oil on canvas, 32 x 38 in., Collection of Barney Ebsworth
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