Automat (painting)

Automat (painting)

Infobox Painting|

title=Automat
artist=Edward Hopper
year=1927
type=Oil on canvas
height=71.4
width=91.4
height_inch=28
width_inch=36
city=Des Moines
museum=Des Moines Art Center

"Automat" (1927) is a painting by Edward Hopper which portrays a lone woman staring into a cup of coffee in an Automat at night. The reflection of identical rows of light fixtures stretches out through the night-blackened window.

As is often the case in Hopper's paintings, both the woman's circumstances and her mood are ambiguous. She is well-dressed and is wearing makeup, which could indicate either that she is on her way to or from work at a job where personal appearance is important, or that she is on her way to or from a social occasion. She has removed only one glove, which may indicate either that she is distracted, that she is in a hurry and can stop only for a moment, or simply that she has just come in from outside, and has not yet warmed up.

The time of year--late autumn or winter--is evident from the fact that the woman is warmly dressed. But the time of day is unclear, since days are short at this time of year. It is possible, for example, that it is just after sunset, and early enough in the evening that the automat could be the spot at which she has arranged to rendezvous with a friend. Or it could be late at night, after the woman has completed a shift at work. Or again, it could be early in the morning, before sunrise, as a shift is about to start.

Whatever the hour, the restaurant appears to be largely empty and there are no signs of activity (or of any life at all) on the street outside. This adds to the sense of loneliness, and has caused the painting to be popularly associated with the concept of urban alienation. One critic has observed that, in a pose typical of Hopper's melancholic subjects, "the woman's eyes are downcast and her thoughts turned inward." [Iversen, Margaret: "Edward Hopper." Tate Publishing, 2004, p. 57.] Another critic has described her as "gazing at her coffee cup as if it were the last thing in the world she could hold on to." [Schmied, Wieland: "Edward Hopper: Portraits of America." Translated by John William Gabriel. Munich: Prestel, 1999, p. 76.] In 1995, "Time" magazine used "Automat" as the cover image for a story about stress and depression in the 20th century. ["Time" magazine, August 28, 1995]

The pose is reminiscent of Edgar Degas's "L'Absinthe"--although unlike the subject in Degas' painting, the woman is introspective, rather than dissipated. In an innovative twist, Hopper made the woman’s legs the brightest spot in the painting, thereby “turning her into an object of desire” and “making the viewer a voyeur.” [ Robert Hobbs, "Edward Hopper." New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1987, p. 72.] By today’s standards this description seems overstated, but in 1927 the public display of women’s legs was still a relatively novel phenomenon. The presence of a chairback in the lower right-hand corner of the canvas suggests that the viewer is sitting at a nearby table, from which vantage-point a stranger might be able to glance, uninvited, upon the woman.

Hopper would make the crossed legs of a female subject the brightest spot on an otherwise dark canvas in a number of later paintings, including "Compartment C, Car 293" (1938) and "Hotel Lobby" (1943). [The comparison between "Automat" and "Hotel Lobby" is made in Robert Hobbs, "Edward Hopper." New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1987, p. 137.] The female subject of his 1931 painting, "Barber Shop", is also in a pose similar to the woman in "Automat", and the viewer's image of her is similarly bisected by a table. But the placing of the subject in a bright, populated place, at midday, makes the woman less isolated and vulnerable, and hence the viewer's gaze seems less intrusive.

Hopper’s paintings are frequently built around a vignette that unfolds as the viewer gazes into a window, or out through a window. Sometimes, as in "Railroad Sunset" (1929), "Nighthawks" (1942) and "Office in a Small City" (1953), it is still possible to see details of the scene beyond even after Hopper has guided the viewer’s gaze through two panes of glass. When Hopper wishes to obscure the view, he tends to position the window at a sharp angle to the viewer’s vantage-point, or to block the view with curtains or blinds. Another favourite technique (used, for example, in "Conference at Night" (1949), is to use bright light, flooding in from the exterior at a sharp angle from the sun or from an unseen streetlight, to illuminate a few mundane details within inches of the far side of the window, thereby throwing the deeper reaches of the view into shadow.

By contrast, in "Automat" the window dominates the painting, and yet conveys no information at all about the world outside, other than the fact that it is night. The complete blackness outside is a departure both from Hopper’s usual techniques, and from realism, since a New York street at night is full of light from cars and street lamps. This complete emptiness allows the reflections from the interior to stand out more dramatically, and intensifies the viewer’s focus upon the woman. The focusing effect of the blank window behind the woman can be seen most clearly when it is contrasted with "Sunlight in a Cafeteria" (1958), one of Hopper’s late paintings. In this painting, a female and a male subject sit in an otherwise empty cafeteria in spots reminiscent of the tables occupied, respectively, by the female subject and the viewer in "Automat". But in "Sunlight in a Cafeteria", the well-illuminated street scene outside the large window seemingly distracts the man's attention from his counterpart, so that the two subjects “do not seem to be acting in the same scene, as it were.” [Rolf Gunter Renner, "Edward Hopper." Cologne, Germany: Benedikt Taschen, 1990, p. 81.] By contrast, in "Automat" the viewer is fully engaged by the presence of the woman.

Notes


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Chop Suey (painting) — Chop Suey Artist Edward Hopper Year 1929 Type Oil on canvas Dimensions 81.3 cm × 96.5 cm (32 in × 38 in) Location Collection of Barney A. Ebsworth Chop S …   Wikipedia

  • Horn & Hardart — is a company that came to prominence as the proprietor of the first automat in New York City. German born Frank Hardart and Philadelphia s Joseph Horn opened their first restaurant together in Philadelphia on December 22, 1888. The vest pocket… …   Wikipedia

  • Nighthawks — This article is about the painting by Edward Hopper. For other uses, see Nighthawks (disambiguation). Nighthawks Artist Edward Hopper Year 1942 Type Oil on canvas Dimensions …   Wikipedia

  • Office at Night — Artist Edward Hopper Year 1940 Type Oil on canvas Dimensions 56.356 cm × 63.82 cm (22.1875 in × 25.125 in) Location Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota Office at Night …   Wikipedia

  • Edward Hopper — Infobox Artist bgcolour = #6495ED name = Edward Hopper imagesize = caption = Edward Hopper, Self Portrait , 1906 birthname = birthdate = birth date|1882|07|22 location = Nyack, New York deathdate = death date and age|1967|05|15|1882|07|22… …   Wikipedia

  • L'Absinthe — Infobox Painting| title=L Absinthe artist=Edgar Degas year=1876 type=Oil on canvas height=92 width=68 city=Paris museum=Musée d Orsay L Absinthe also known as The Absinthe Drinker or Glass of Absinthe is a painting by Edgar Degas. Originally… …   Wikipedia

  • Diner — This article is about a type of restaurant. For other meanings, see Diner (disambiguation). A diner in Frazer, Pennsylvania …   Wikipedia

  • Office in a Small City — Artist Edward Hopper Year 1953 Type Oil on canvas Dimensions 71 cm × 102 cm (28 in × …   Wikipedia

  • Werkverzeichnis von Edward Hopper — Werkverzeichnis des US amerikanischen Malers Edward Hopper. Sein Werk lässt sich aufgrund seiner Arbeitsweisen in folgende Perioden teilen: Whitney Museum 1893 bis 1901 1902 bis etwa 1922 1923 bis etwa 1930 1931 bis 1950 und danach bis zum Tod… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Biennale de Paris — André Malraux, fondateur de la biennale de Paris, par Gisèle Freund, 1935. © Agence Nina Beskow Informations géographiques Pays …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”