http://www-math.mit.edu/~tchow/barscene.jpg
What I am wondering is if this picture derives from some famous painting.
It looks vaguely familiar but I can't place it. Can you help?
--
Tim Chow tchow-at-alum-dot-mit-dot-edu
The range of our projectiles---even ... the artillery---however great, will
never exceed four of those miles of which as many thousand separate us from
the center of the earth. ---Galileo, Dialogues Concerning Two New Sciences
http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/hopper/street/hopper.nighthawks.jpg
Brooke
<tc...@lsa.umich.edu> wrote in message news:9olo4c$kga$1...@galois.mit.edu...
>I believe it was Edward Hopper's "Nighthawks"(?). Does this look like it?
>
>http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/hopper/street/hopper.nighthawks.jpg
>
>
>Brooke
>
In Peanuts: A Golden Celebration, Schulz confirms that it was an homage to
"Nighthawks".
Christopher L.
http://members.aol.com/ezclee4050/spareroom/home.htm
"Lache pas la patate"-Cajun proverb ("don't drop the potato"-i.e: don't give
up, hang in there)
Wonderful! Thanks a bundle.
brooke <bro...@sonic.net> wrote in message
news:0_tr7.3949$EB2....@typhoon.sonic.net...
> Wow, this is cool. The painting I thought of was also a tribute (but I
> didn't know it until you posted this) - it's by Gottfried Helnwein and
> called 'Boulevard of Broken Dreams'. It shows Hopper's scene peopled with
> movie stars instead:
> http://www.look4fineart.co.uk/Helnwein-Gottfried/Helnwein-Gottfried-Night-Ha
> wks-2101248.html
> Alison
These days, I'm pretty sure far more people know of the knockoff than
the original. Kinda strange, but not the first time such things have
happened.
- Dr Strangemind
> brooke <bro...@sonic.net> wrote in message
> news:0_tr7.3949$EB2....@typhoon.sonic.net...
> > I believe it was Edward Hopper's "Nighthawks".
> >
> > http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/hopper/street/hopper.nighthawks.jpg
> >
> >
> > Brooke