Hopper is famous for painting scenes of urban and rural American life. Many of his paintings have a lonely or isolated mood. The artist thought of these emotions as features of fast-paced modern life.
The 1925 painting House by the Railroad (top of page) is a “portrait” of a Victorian-era home in Hopper’s hometown, Nyack, New York. There are no people or other houses, which lends the composition an eerie stillness. The house looks so creepy, the movie director Alfred Hitchcock used it as inspiration for the house in his classic thriller Psycho.
The artist once said, “I wanted to paint sunlight on the side of a house.” The sun illuminates the house on the left and casts a dark shadow on the right, adding to the mysterious mood. Hopper painted the house using two-point perspective. The house is set diagonally to the viewer; we see two sides at once. The vertical edge lines of the structure intersect the horizon line at 90 degrees. The horizontal converging lines recede to two vanishing points outside the frame (see diagram).
Hopper hid the horizon line behind a set of railroad tracks in the foreground. He placed the tracks at a slight inward angle, adding more depth to the painting. The tracks also act as a barrier to separate the house from the viewer.