Edward Hopper House

Edward Hopper House

Share

It was built in 1858 by his maternal grandfather, and served as his primary residence until 1910. After Hopper’s death the house fell into disrepair, but was saved from demolition and restored by members of the local community in 1971.

07/08/2026

🎨 Join us this Thursday as we unveil our Hopperesque Community Mural before the opening concert of our Jazz in the Garden series!⁣⁣
⁣⁣
Created over three community workshops, the mural reflects the creativity, collaboration, and spirit of our Nyack community. Join us for the unveiling and dedication, then stay for an unforgettable evening as The Wonder Trio opens our summer concert series with fresh interpretations of the music of Stevie Wonder.⁣⁣
⁣⁣
A heartfelt thank you to Eleanor Kaufman, Angela Camenisch, Tillie Martignoni, Cass McVety, Janet Hamlin, Brian Hart, Alice Mizrachi, our Teen Nighthawks, our partner Hudson Valley Mural Arts, and everyone who helped bring this project to life.⁣⁣
⁣⁣
Special thanks to the New York State Council on the Arts for underwriting this program.⁣⁣
⁣⁣
📅 Thursday, July 9⁣⁣
🎨 Mural Unveiling & Dedication⁣⁣
🎷 Jazz in the Garden, 7:00-9:00 PM featuring The Wonder Trio⁣⁣
📍 Edward Hopper House Museum Garden, 82 N. Broadway, Nyack⁣⁣
⁣⁣
EHHM members can still purchase season ticket packages through opening day.⁣⁣
⁣⁣
The forecast looks great. We hope you'll celebrate with us!⁣⁣

Photos from Edward Hopper House's post 07/07/2026

In Remnant, James Prosek transforms the shadow of a sugar maple into something almost living. The branches spread across the red barn “like a nervous system, or a map, or a kind of writing,” turning the barn into the surface on which the absent tree makes its full self known.

“The barn is the tree,” Prosek writes. “The wood holds the memory of the trees it was made from.” The shadow of a living tree falls across the body of dead ones, creating what feels less like a landscape and more like a reunion.

Presented in conversation with works by Edward Hopper and Josephine Nivison Hopper, Memory, Trees & Shadows explores presence and absence, memory and mark-making, and the ways art helps us look more closely at the natural world and our place within it.

On view through October 4, 2026.

*James Prosek, Remnant (2026), oil on canvas, Courtesy of the artist, © James Prosek, Photo credit: ImageWorks, Westport, CT; Courtesy of the Artist and Waqas Wajahat, New York

Photos from Edward Hopper House's post 07/01/2026

How do artists across generations interpret trees, shadow, memory, and the American landscape?⁣

Our new exhibition places new works by James Prosek and Sarah Sockbeson in dialogue with rarely exhibited works by both Josephine Nivison Hopper and Edward Hopper, drawn from loans by the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Provincetown Art Association and Museum, private collections, and our own holdings.⁣

James Prosek: Memory, Trees & Shadow⁣
A Visual Conversation With Josephine Nivison Hopper, Edward Hopper, and Sarah Sockbeson⁣
On view through Oct 4, 2026⁣

Seen together, the exhibition reveals shared themes of observation, atmosphere, ecology, and intimacy with the natural world, while offering new perspectives on artists often viewed through very different lenses.⁣

https://www.edwardhopperhouse.org/prosek-memory.html

Want your establishment to be the top-listed Arts & Entertainment in Nyack?
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Category

Telephone

Address


82 N Broadway
Nyack, NY
10960

Opening Hours

Wednesday 1pm - 5pm
Thursday 1pm - 5pm
Friday 1pm - 5pm
Saturday 12pm - 5pm
Sunday 12pm - 5pm