In Edward Hopper's painting "Office at Night," a smoky-eyed woman in a tight blue dress stands at the open drawer of a filing cabinet. She is looking at a man in a business suit who sits at a wooden desk, staring at a sheet of paper. There is a green lamp, a black telephone, a window with the shade half-drawn, an open door.
The flat light, the blue shadows, the angle of observation — from above, as though from a surveillance camera — all give the painting a mysterious, almost sinister air. Who is the woman? What is the man reading? What is their relationship? What is the story?
We are about to find out.
The story of the painting — one version, anyway, dreamed up by a couple of fiction writers — will be serialized on the Walker Art Center's website throughout April.
"Office at Night," a novella, was written by Laird Hunt ("Kind One") and Kate Bernheimer ("Horse, Flower, Bird") and is a joint project of the Walker and Coffee House Press, which will publish the novella as an e-book in June.
The idea came from Coffee House publisher Chris Fischbach and Walker curator of public practice Sarah Schultz, who were kicking around various plans for the two institutions to work on together. The Hopper exhibit, which runs through June 20, seemed a natural.
Any one of Hopper's paintings could inspire a novella, Fischbach said. "Hopper lends himself to narrative possibilities with most of his paintings," he said. But "Office at Night" is owned by the Walker, so it made sense to highlight that work.
Next up was choosing the writers. Fischbach began looking through the Coffee House list.