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Cleveland Museum of Art

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Edward Hopper — Lighthouse Village (also known as Cape Elizabeth)
Edward Hopper

Lighthouse Village (also known as Cape Elizabeth)

1929

Edward Hopper made this watercolor during the last of several painting excursions that he took to Maine. He had painted the lighthouse at Cape Elizabeth once two years before, but found the structure so interesting that he returned to it in this drawing. Hopper was especially attracted to the varying green tones of the grass and the combination of buildings, each with a different purpose, including one where the lighthouse keepers slept and the three at the bottom where coast guard families lived. He used a slightly different tone of watercolor for each of the structures to accurately convey the reflection of light on them.

Medium
watercolor with gouache over graphite
Location
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH

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About this work

Edward Hopper, Lighthouse Village (also known as Cape Elizabeth), 1929

Edward Hopper made this watercolor during the last of several painting excursions that he took to Maine. He had painted the lighthouse at Cape Elizabeth once two years before, but found the structure so interesting that he returned to it in this drawing. Hopper was especially attracted to the varying green tones of the grass and the combination of buildings, each with a different purpose, including one where the lighthouse keepers slept and the three at the bottom where coast guard families lived. He used a slightly different tone of watercolor for each of the structures to accurately convey the reflection of light on them.

Medium
watercolor with gouache over graphite
Year
1929
Seen at
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH

Related themes

Watercolor, Works on Paper, Modern, Drawing, Unique Work

More works by Edward Hopper

Similar artists

Charles Demuth, John Marin, Winslow Homer

Collected by

Cleveland Museum of Art, Richard Caswell, Art Institute of Chicago