Q and Art: Just Looking

July 22, 2014

This post is part of an ongoing series on Eye Level: Q and Art, where American Art's Research department brings you interesting questions and answers about art and artists from our archive.

Question: In Edward Hopper's Cape Cod Morning, what is the woman looking at?

Answer: That's a great question. However, the answer is we don't know! The woman's gaze is fixed on a place that is beyond the border of the painting.

A 1955 TIME magazine article recorded the following conversation about Cape Cod Morning between Hopper and his wife, Jo:

"It's a woman looking out to see if the weather's good enough to hang out her wash," she explains. "Did I say that?" Hopper rumbles in contradiction, "You're making it Norman Rockwell. From my point of view, she's just looking out the window, just looking out the window."

Jo knew that Hopper did not want his paintings to tell specific stories. She may have made her comment to needle Hopper who was notoriously reticent with interviewers. Hopper's focus in the scene was the placement of the solitary figure within the window and the effect of strong sunlight on the figure and the house. Although Hopper insists that the woman in the painting is "just looking out the window", her attentive posture and confinement within the window infuses the scene with a tension that contradicts the impassive description of a woman simply looking out a window.

In 1953 Hopper wrote: "Great art is the outward expression of an inner life in the artist, and this inner life will result in his personal vision of the world." Hopper avoided narratives, yet he strove express his "inner life" in his work. It is Hopper's emotion that makes Cape Cod Morning grab our attention, causes us to ask "what is she looking at?", and makes it a painting that is difficult to forget.

To learn more about Edward Hopper look for the following resources online and at your library.

Hopper's Cape Cod Morning is part of the museum's exhibition Modern American Realism: The Sara Roby Foundation Collection on view in American Art's First Floor West gallery until August 17. Listen to museum director, Betsy Broun, discuss Cape Cod Morning, along with other artworks in the Roby Collection, in an recent interview with NPR. And, celebrate Edward Hopper's birthday today with us by taking a look at the American Art Museum's An Edward Hopper Scrapbook.

Categories

Recent Posts

Detail of Phoebe Kline. She is sitting in front of orchids and smiling.
Docent Phoebe Kline began at SAAM in 1974 and she's still going strong
A photograph of a woman in front of artwork
More visitors and new exhibitions highlight a season of change.
 Stephanie Stebich, SAAM's Margaret and Terry Stent Direction in the museum's Lincoln Gallery. Photo by Gene Young. 
Stephanie Stebich
The Margaret and Terry Stent Director, Smithsonian American Art Museum and Renwick Gallery
Marian Anderson and symbols that surround her life
William H. Johnson portrayed the singer in multiple paintings, including in his Fighters for Freedom series.