Hopper's A Woman In The Sun

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In a large and unusually plain blue bedroom, a naked woman stands comfortably with a cigarette in hand. She appears in her thirties, with a toned body and blonde hair accentuating her beauty. Positioned with her side to the viewer, she stands in the sun, which shines yellow through an unseen window; her shadow reaching well beyond view. Her nude body, not meant to be seen in a sexualized manner, gives off a calm, serene ambiance. After allowing the beautiful young woman to consume the mind, the eye travels to the museum label. Edward Hopper painted “A Woman in the Sun” in 1961, when his wife, the model, was seventy-eight years old. Naturally, the viewer refers back to the painting, but again views the alluring, youthful woman.
The label continues …show more content…

In “A Woman in the Sun,” the viewer has no reason to believe that Hopper has painted the room as anything other than it was that very day. When first reading that the woman is in fact seventy-eight, the audience may feel deceived; however, reading that Hopper stayed true to “his own internal vision,”(Whitney Museum of American Art) a feeling of relief appears, although one can only take words on a museum wall to such extent. This painting is Hopper's truth- when looking at his wife, he does not see the old woman most of us would, he instead sees the gorgeous young woman he fell in love with, creating a personal statement of the truth of his wife's eternal beauty within …show more content…

It was not the sunlight. It was a rigged 105 round. But if I could ever get the story right, how the sun seemed to gather around him and pick him up and lift him into a tree, if I could somehow recreate the fatal whiteness of that light, the quick glare, the obvious cause and effect, then you would believe the last thing Lemon believed, which for him must’ve been the final truth”(O’Brien). As for the other people present for Lemon’s death, they might describe the event as horrendous. Neither story would be wrong, because both were experienced differently, perhaps some not in full because “[when] a guy dies, like Lemon, you look away and then look back for a moment and then look away

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