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"I showed the America I knew and observed to others who might not have noticed.” Norman Rockwell Norman Rockwell was perhaps the most well-known artist in contemporary times. He was a painter who was as much at ease painting kings, presidents and movie stars as he was at painting freckled-faced boys, pigtailed girls, kindly old folks, and loveable dogs. Using oils, he developed a realistic technique, idealizing small-town America. He was an illustrator for major American magazines, such as Collier's , Life , Look , and most notably, The Saturday Evening Post. His covers for the latter magazine made him famous, giving him an audience larger than that of any other artist in history. He made his home in Arlington, Vermont, where can be found many of the settings used in his illustrations, as well as some of the local people who were his models. A Norman Rockwell Museum is located in the center of the village. Rockwell's career spanned almost 60 years. The lean, pipe smoking illustrator worked seven days a week to produce canvas images of the nation he loved. As his personal contribution during World War II, Rockwell painted the famous "Four Freedoms" posters, symbolizing for millions the war aims as described by President Franklin Roosevelt. One of those posters, 'The Freedom from Fear', is reproduced here, along with a variety of his other well-known works. |
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