Edward Hopper scene becomes a new stamp

16 August 2011
Edward Hopper's "The Long Leg," circa 1935.
Edward Hopper's "The Long Leg," circa 1935.
(Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanic Gardens)

An idyllic seascape off Provincetown, Mass., has been chosen by the US Postal Service as a new stamp.

Edward Hopper's 1930s painting of a sailboat near Long Point Light, titled “The Long Leg,” which resides at the Huntington Library, Art Collections & Botanical Gardens, was selected for the Postal Service's American Treasures series. The scene combines two of Hopper's most iconic maritime imagery: a lighthouse and a sailboat.

The stamp debuts Aug. 24.

Hopper (1882-1967) built a home and studio in the Cape Cod town of Truro in 1934. He, and his wife Josephine, enjoyed dozens of summers on Cape Cod where he painted the local scenery.



Categories: American art

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