Category Archives: Art
Artwork of the Day: Drifter’s Delight
Artwork of the Day: Planet Stories
Artwork of the Day: Tonight is Forever
Artwork of the Day: America’s Cities of Sin
Artwork of the Day: Big Doc’s Girl
Artist Profile: Stanley Meltzoff (1917–2006)
Artwork of the Day: Man Crazy
Artwork of the Day: Marilyn Monroe
Tomorrow, Erin will be back and running this feature so I’m going to share one final image.
I’m not sure who took the picture above. A lot of sites incorrectly credit Otto Bettmann. I nearly made the mistake of crediting old Otto myself. However, Otto was not a photographer. Otto was an archivist and the picture above was a part of his collection. But regardless of who took the picture, it’s an iconic image.
Two more things to say:
First off, I have to say thank you to Erin for trusting me with Artwork of the Day. When I first told her that I’d be willing to fill in for her while she spent this week cataloging our mom’s doll collection, I’m sure that there was a part of her that worried I’d use it as an excuse to spend the whole week posting Degrassi screenshots. I’ve seen firsthand the amount of time and thought that Erin puts into finding and selecting each day’s image. But she took a chance on me and I had a lot of fun doing it!
Secondly, from me and everyone else here at the Shattered Lens: HAPPY BIRTHDAY, ARLEIGH!
Artwork of the Day: New York Movie
I could never work in a movie theater.
Don’t get me wrong. I love movies, as anyone who has spent any time reading this site should know. I consider both the Alamo Drafthouse and the Dallas Angelika to be a second home. But, even if I didn’t have a degree and I was totally alone in the world and I desperately needed a job, I could never work at either one of them. I would be scared that, if I did, the act of going to the movies would lose its magic. My love of film would be destroyed by the drudgery of employment. (For that same reason, I could also never work in a book store.)
That’s something that I find myself thinking about as I look at Edward Hopper’s New York Movie. As a writer, it’s impossible for me to look at any painting or photograph without immediately trying to turn it into a short story. While the theater’s the audience is sucked into the fantasy of cinema, the usher stands to the side and appears to be lost in thought. Much as I’ve looked at John French Sloan’s Movies, Five Cents and subsequently spent hours considering who the woman in the audience is looking at, New York Movie has inspired me to spend hours wondering what the usher is thinking about while the audience watches the movie. Is she bored or is she sad? Is she thinking about the movie or the audience or about what she’s going to do when she gets off work? Does she like the movie, does she hate the movie, or has she reached the point where she doesn’t even notice the movie?
Edward Hopper’s best known work was Nighthawks, that famous painting of four people in an all-night diner. Hopper’s model for New York Movie‘s usher was his wife, Jo, who posed under a lamp outside of their apartment.
























