Fantastical Rockwell
February 4 through June 5, 2022
A perceptive observer, Norman Rockwell was a persuasive visual commentator whose realist paintings for popular periodicals inspired belief by millions in the innate goodness of humanity and the achievability of the American dream. Rockwell also inspired our love of fantasy in ways that he may not have fully perceived. His carefully constructed artworks for the Saturday Evening Post and other magazines, and for scores of twentieth century advertisers and products, at the work of a consummate mythmaker who understood his audience’s deepest desires and spoke to them from the heart.
Art critic Peter Schjeldahl once noted that Rockwell’s “precisely observed facts squared with deeply serious hopes” constituted “as accurate a graph as we have of what being American – a fictive condition, always,” could feel like.
As seen in this exhibit, Rockwell’s flight of fantasy were prominent within his body of work throughout his career. Fantastical elements are revealed in Rockwell’s portrayals of fairy tale and fictional characters in artworks like The Magic Foot-ball (1914), and Saturday People (1966). They also appear in images grounded in real-world scenarios like Cobbler Studying a Doll’s Shoe (1921), Mermaid (1955), and Just Married (1957), which inspire our own imaginings today, as they did in their time.
About the Artist
Born in New York City in 1894, Norman Rockwell always wanted to be an artist. At age 14, Rockwell enrolled in art classes at The New York School of Art (formerly The Chase School of Art). Two years later, in 1910, he left high school to study art at The National Academy of Design. He soon transferred to The Art Students League, where he studied with Thomas Fogarty and George Bridgman. Fogarty’s instruction in illustration prepared Rockwell for his first commercial commissions. From Bridgman, Rockwell learned the technical skills on which he relied throughout his long career. Learn more…
DIRECTIONS
Norman Rockwell Museum
9 Glendale Road Route 183
Stockbridge, MA 01262
413-931-2221
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