
Edward Hopper’s Distinctly American Solitude
An excerpt from Ed Simon's book "American Elegy" analyzes Edward Hopper's iconic painting "Nighthawks" (1942), housed at the Art Institute of Chicago. Simon explores the painting's imagined diner setting, its realist style, and the sense of loneliness it evokes, noting that Hopper claimed inspiration from a Greenwich Village restaurant but likely invented the scene. The text positions Hopper as a painter of American solitude, with figures trapped in their own selfhood.




