Edward Hopper House Museum

  • Edward Hopper
  • 82 N Broadway, Nyack, NY 10960

Edward Hopper was born in 1882 in Nyack, about 30 miles north of Manhattan. He would become known for his paintings that capture the loneliness and isolation of modern American life with his signature use of light and atmospheres.

The Edward Hopper House is a two story Greek Revival style dwelling built in 1858 by Hopper's maternal grandfather, John Smith. This was where Hopper was born and spent the first 26 years of his life. As a child, Hopper displayed a talent for drawing early on, creating hundreds of drawings that demonstrated he was already a keen observer of people, places, and activities in his hometown.

After graduating from Nyack High School in 1899, Hopper commuted to New York City to study illustration and then fine art with Robert Henri at the New York School of Art. He made the first of three trips to Europe in 1906. In 1908, at age 26, he moved from the family home to New York City to pursue his career full time. However, the house remained the Hopper family's primary residence until the death of his sister Marion in 1965.

Hopper was frequently inspired by two locations: downtown New York, where he lived and worked in the same apartment on Washington Square from 1913 until his death, and Cape Cod, where beginning in 1934, he and his artist wife Josephine Nivison maintained a second home and studio.

After Hopper's death in 1967, leaving all his works to the Whitney Museum of American Art, the house in Nyack was at risk. In 1971, a group of local citizens established the Edward Hopper Landmark Preservation Foundation to save the birthplace. The house opened as the Edward Hopper House Art Center and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.

Today, the museum features early Hopper works, memorabilia including model boats he built, his self-portrait, personal bicycle, and family photographs. The ground floor serves as a gallery space with rotating exhibitions.