Ephemeral New York says the vantage point of a “View From Brooklyn” by George Copeland Ault (1927) looks like Brooklyn Heights, Red Hook, or possibly further upriver in Williamsburg or Greenpoint. Ault was a “precisionist and surrealist painter” known for nocturnes, who had a knack for showing lonely, everyday beauty of the world in a moment of absolute stillness.
Ault also dabbled in realism, and essentially painted whatever he saw around himself in a quietly controlled style–often architectural subjects, such as this Brooklyn building.
via The “absolute stillness” of a view from Brooklyn « Ephemeral New York.