“gentle, even pleasant kind of loneliness,” and he values Hopper’s paintings that “allowed their viewers to witness an echo of their own grief and thereby feel less personally persecuted and beset by it.”
This article aims to point out evidence of the sublime as category aesthetics, from the reading of the work of Edward Hopper, William Blake and pieces, as well as through the poetry of Charles Baudelaire. In this sense, aspects of the condition of the modern spirit and loneliness urbana will also be addressed.