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Born:
1894
Died:
1978
Biography: Mr. Rockwell began his illustrious career with immediate success
when he painted Christmas cards, for his first commission, at age
sixteen, and illustrated his first book one year later. Aglow with
success, the determined young man signed his name in blood, swearing
never to do advertising jobs. He kept that promise until his first
known advertisement for H. J. Heinz Company, Pork'n Beans, appeared
in the 1914 edition of the Boy Scout Handbook.The first advertisement
by Norman Rockwell to appear in The Saturday Evening Post was January
13, 1917. His first Post cover was published on May 20, 1916.
Much of Rockwell's prodigious output was
painted for magazine reproduction and never intended to provide
enduring examples of his work. Due to his own technique of using
a special compound between layers of paint, some of his originals
have yellowed with age, but the aging hasn't diminished his popularity
nor the demand for "anything Rockwell."
After many years of being scorned as an unworthy imitator, Norman
Rockwell's human interpretation of the American scene survived
the criticism of art connoisseurs. His work was revered, year after
year on magazine covers by two generations of Rockwell watchers:
Those who recalled and those too young to remember.
Although Norman Rockwell, himself, eventually became as recognizable
as one of his illustrations, such recognition was too little and
very late. His first photograph accompanied illustrations in a
1914 Boys' Life magazine, but few biographical sketches appeared
prior to 1945. The Saturday Evening Post first printed information
about Rockwell in 1926, ten years and 82 covers after their association
began.
Rockwell made no secret of his lifetime
preference for countrified realism--"Things happen in the
country, but you don't see them. In the city you are constantly
confronted by unpleasantness. I find it sordid and unsettling."
He believed the time he spent in the countryside was a great influence
on his idyllic approach to storytelling on canvas. Though Rockwell
was unrepentant about his rural preference, he was surprisingly
charitable toward contemporaries who shunned his technique in favor
of modern art.
Perhaps the most provocative opinion on
Rockwell's work was expressed in a November 13,1970 issue of
Life Magazine. When the editors brought the dilemma of Rockwell's
art popularity and lack of recognition, to their reading public
in a one page article, posing the question: "If
We All Like It Is It Art?" Their readers promptly responded.
The resulting action from ordinary people around the world created
the first -man art revolution in America, far surpassing Currier
and Ives. A few months later, the first Norman Rockwell plate,
The Family Tree, was fired; the Rockwell Revolution had started,
and the first of millions of collectibles were offered to Rockwell
loving minions. It was then that author, Thomas Buechner and publisher,
Harry Abrams moved Rockwell out of the closet, and onto the world's
coffee tables. The rest is art history.
By 1978, at the height of his popularity, and
the year of his death, forty books and 140 articles chronicling
Rockwell's accomplishments had appeared in over 56 publications.
Credit: The above is by Mary Moline. She is the
author of the NORMAN ROCKWELL ENCYCLOPEDIA, the first chronological
catalog of the artist's work, published in 1978 by The Curtis Publishing
Company and author of six editions of the NORMAN ROCKWELL COLLECTIBLES
VALUE GUIDE.
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