Arts & Entertainment
2011 To Be the Year of Hopper
The Edward Hopper House will celebrate its 40-year anniversary with a special exhibition and more.

Whether you are a local resident or visitor from out of town, the Edward Hopper House Art Center provides an intimate portal into one of America's foremost 20th century realists.
And visitors come from farther than you'd think.
"Edward Hopper enthusiasts from as far away as Europe, Australia and Japan have visited the gallery and boyhood home of Hopper," said Carole Perry, Executive Director of the Hopper House Art Center.
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For the unaware or uninitiated, the Hopper House is perched on top of the hill on Broadway in Nyack with a clear view of the Hudson River. Hopper's birthplace and childhood home was build in 1858 by the artist's grandfather, and was occupied by the Hopper family for 107 years.
Hopper (1882-1967) graduated from Nyack High School in 1899 and eventually moved to Manhattan and spent his summers in South Truro in Cape Cod with his wife Josephine. Hopper, his wife and his sister Marion (who never married and lived in the family home all her life) are all buried in a family plot in Nyack's Oak Hill Cemetery, overlooking the Hudson.
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Following Hopper's death, the house fell into disrepair and was slated to be demolished—until a group of local citizen's raised funds to purchase and restore the house. In 1971, the Edward Hopper House Landmark Preservation Foundation (now the Edward Hopper House Art Center) was formed, and in 2000 The Hopper House received the distinction of being listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Now, the historic home is approaching another important date—it's 40-year anniversary. To commemorate the four decades of history, 2011 is being declared "The Year of Edward Hopper."
Festivities will include a gala opening (at a yet to be disclosed village location), exhibitions and events to celebrate Hopper.
"When you walk through the house you get a feel of the influences that Hopper had with the play of light in various rooms, local architecture, the Hudson River and the surrounding village," Perry said, linking his art to his home surroundings.
The highlight of the year-long celebration will be the exhibition, set to run from May through July and titled "Edward Hopper, Prelude: the Nyack Years." The exhibition will focus on Hopper's early work—created while he was living in the Nyack home—and include paintings, drawings, watercolors and memorabilia. The selected works reflect how the artistic foundation for many of Hopper's later masterworks were established during his early years in the village.
The work, borrowed from the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Arthayer R. Sanborn Collection, will also display some drawings that have never before been exhibited.
"We have been presented with an opportunity to exhibit original Hopper's and to propel our community art center to a new level," Perry explained. "For the show we have been very fortunate to get in-kind donations for a new, state-of-the-art security system and a climate controlled air conditioner and there will be a new, dedicated Hopper gallery."