Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Office in a small city, 1953



Office in a small city


Edward Hopper and his wife first rented a cottage in Truro, Massachusetts, in the summer of 1930, and they would return there regularly through the 1950s. Hopper began Office in a Small City while he was staying in Truro in the summer of 1953, and he finished it in his New York studio in the fall. Rather than depicting the Cape Cod landscape, however, Office in a Small City is a scene that could have taken place in any American town in the mid-twentieth century. Hopper's explanation of his earlier work Office at Night (1940; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis) also applies to this painting: "My aim was to try to give the sense of an isolated and lonely office interior rather high in the air, with the office furniture which has a very definite meaning to me."

The solitary office worker in this scene is isolated both physically and emotionally. There is no indication of his particular profession, as he sits in his shirtsleeves; he appears, in fact, to be daydreaming rather than working. The postwar culture of American business is evident in the mass-produced office furniture, the impersonal atmosphere of the office itself, and the man's detachment from his unseen coworkers. Despite the light and air afforded by his corner office, he appears trapped in place. He is framed by the office window, and his head is profiled against another window and the wall of the building beyond, in a manner that suggests his containment within his environment. The solitude of the man, and the contrast between the stark, utilitarian upper story of the building and its decorative false front, visible at the lower right, suggest Hopper's own ambivalence toward modern urban life.

Reference
http://www.metny.net/toah/works-of-art/53.183


Key words set 1

Isolated
Daydream
Framed
Trapped
Containment
Utilitarian
Solitude
Contrast

Key words set 2

Physically
Emotionally
Light
Air
Office window
Window
Wall


Key word set 3

ambivalence


Working Narrative

The solitary architect sits in a raw concrete block planning his dream city in the head...

The solitary architect trapped in a set of frames, confronts the conservative order finding his way to the future...

The architect confronts the conservative order alone through a set of raw frames where he will find his way to the future...

An revolutionist confronts the conservative order alone through a set of concrete scenes where he will find his way to the future...

The solitary man sits in a concrete block gazing at the conservative order through the window. He is not afraid of confronting the obsolete system, in fact, he will bring change to the community...

The solitary man sits in a concrete block gazing at the conservative order through the window. He can not help himself wondering "What I have to do to make this world more conservative?"



Final Narrative

The solitary man sits in a concrete block gazing at the conservative order through the window. He is no friend of the outdated world, in fact he does not deign to bother as long as his castle stands.





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