I walked into the Whitney yesterday, and Hopper's "Early Sunday Morning" stopped me cold. Not because it's new—it's been there for decades—but because timing is everything with art. It was 2 PM on a Wednesday, the galleries nearly empty, and there I was, staring at a row of storefronts painted in 1930, feeling the exact same Sunday morning quiet Hopper captured almost a century ago.
The painting is deceptively simple: red brick buildings, a barber pole, morning light that hits the second-story windows at that precise angle that makes you think about coffee you haven't brewed yet. No people. Just the aftermath of Saturday night and the anticipation of Monday morning, suspended in paint. Hopper was a master of architectural loneliness, but this piece transcends that. It's not lonely—it's contemplative. There's dignity in that empty street.
What strikes me most is how contemporary it feels. We talk about urban isolation like it's a product of smartphones and social media, but Hopper saw it in 1930. He understood that cities are paradoxically the loneliest places, that you can feel most alone when surrounded by millions. The painting doesn't judge this feeling—it observes it with the same neutral morning light that illuminates those storefronts.