Les Deux Pigeons

Edward Hopper American

Not on view

The two pigeons referenced by the title are an embracing couple seated on a cafe terrace over a river, oblivious to a waiter and men at an adjacent table. The artist had returned to New York from Paris in 1910 and took up etching when his paintings failed to find buyers, producing about 70 prints between 1915 and 1923. In addition to evoking memories of France, he focused on men and women experiencing the distinct urban character of New York, and explored rural and coastal Maine and Massachusetts. After Hopper received two awards for his prints in 1923—the Logan Prize from the Chicago Society of Etchers and the W. A. Bryan Prize—he refocused his energies on painting, but often returned to subjects that he had used etching to shape.

Les Deux Pigeons, Edward Hopper (American, Nyack, New York 1882–1967 New York), Etching

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