STOCKBRIDGE, MA.- Norman Rockwell Museum announces the loan of Norman Rockwells iconic painting The Problem We All Live With, part of its permanent collection, to The White House, where it will be exhibited through October 31. The loan was requested this year by President Barack Obama, in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of Ruby Bridges history-changing walk integrating the William Frantz Public School in New Orleans on November 14, 1960, that later inspired Rockwells bold illustration for the January 14, 1964 issue of Look magazine. The Problem We All Live With was the first painting purchased by Norman Rockwell Museum in 1975. The White House loan was made possible through the support of the Henry Luce Foundation.
Norman Rockwell Museum is deeply honored that the White House has requested the loan of one of Rockwells most important paintings, says Museum Director/CEO Laurie Norton Moffatt. The painting has come to serve as an important symbol of civil rights, and Museum Trustee Ruby Bridges historic journey. We are enormously grateful for the support of the Luce Foundation, that made the loan possible.
Ruby Bridges historic walk took place six years after the 1954 United States Supreme Court Brown v. Board of Education ruling declared that state laws establishing separate public schools for black and white students were unconstitutional, and represented a definite victory for the American Civil Rights Movement. Among those Americans to take note of the event was artist Norman Rockwell, a longtime supporter of the goals of equality and tolerance. In his early career, editorial policies governed the placement of minorities in his illustrations (restricting them to service industry positions only), however in 1963 Rockwell confronted the issue of prejudice head-on with one of his most powerful paintingsThe Problem We All Live With. Inspired by the story of Ruby Bridges and school integration, the image featured a young African-American girl being escorted to school amidst signs of protest and fearful ignorance. The painting ushered in a new era in Rockwells career, and remains an important national symbol of the struggle for racial equality.
I was about 18 or 19 years old the first time that I actually saw it, says Ruby Bridges Hall, who now serves on the board of Norman Rockwell Museum. It confirmed what I had been thinking all alongthat this was very important and you did this, and it should be talked about
At that point in time thats what the country was going through, and here was a man who had been doing lots of workpainting family imagesand all of the sudden decided this is what I am going to do
its wrong and Im going to say that its wrong.
The illustration appeared in the January 14, 1964 issue of Look magazine, and earned Rockwell letters of both praise and criticism from readers unused to such direct social commentary from the illustrator. Rockwell would revisit the theme of civil rights in several other illustrations from the period, and in 1970 received the Million Dollar Club Award from The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), for having contributed $1000 to the organization.
Ms. Bridges Hall, who founded The Ruby Bridges Foundation in 1999 to promote the values of tolerance, respect, and appreciation of all differences, commends Rockwell for having enough courage to step up to the plate and say Im going to make a statement, and he did it in a very powerful way.