SACRAMENTO, CA.- The Crocker Art Museum presents a collection by one of Americas most iconic and beloved artists, Norman Rockwell, from November 10, 2012 through February 3, 2013. American Chronicles: The Art of Norman Rockwell offers a rare look at nostalgic and historic works from the Norman Rockwell Museum collection that explores the artist, his images, and their impact and influence on American culture. This exhibition features 50 paintings and 323 original Saturday Evening Post covers.
Rockwells images have become icons of the American experience and continue to resonate with each generation, says Scott A. Shields, the Crocker Art Museums Associate Director and Chief Curator. This exhibition includes numerous paintings that have helped define who we are.
The timelessness and emotion of Rockwells work draws every generation. This exhibition explores his themes of family (Freedom from Want and Christmas Homecoming), innocence (Girl at Mirror), and hometown heroism (Mine Americas Coal) that permeate Rockwells work. His unique artistic legacy offers a personal chronicle of 20th-century life and aspirations that has both reflected and profoundly influenced American perceptions and ideals.
Rockwells paintings narrate life with love, affection, and humor, and he used these uplifting sentiments effectively while creating commercial and advertising work during his 47-year tenure at the Saturday Evening Post. Then, in 1964, Rockwell used his illustrative and storytelling skills at Look magazine to illuminate social issues such as war, racism, poverty, and injustice. His January 14, 1964 cover, The Problem We All Live With, documented the traumatic realities of desegregation in the South. The painting still receives national acclaim and was recently on display at the White House at the request of President Obama to commemorate the event that inspired Rockwell to create the bold illustration: the 50th anniversary of Ruby Bridges history-changing walk on November 14, 1960 that integrated the William Frantz Public School in New Orleans.