NEWARK, NJ.- An important exhibition that explores Norman Rockwells unparalleled role as an American icon-maker and storyteller will be on view at the
Newark Museum from February 28 through May 26, 2014. The exhibition American Chronicles: The Art of Norman Rockwell is organized by Norman Rockwell Museum, Stockbridge, Massachusetts.
Norman Rockwell (1894-1978) painted the best of America, creating indelible images of the lives, hopes and dreams of Americans in the 20th century. Expertly weaving both narrative and painterly images, he was a consummate visual storyteller with a finely honed sense of what made an image successful in the new, rapidly changing era of mass media. Rockwells unique artistic legacy, established during 65 years of painting, offers a personal chronicle of 20th century life and aspirations that has both reflected and profoundly influenced American perceptions and ideals.
All of the original works on view in American Chronicles are drawn from the permanent collection of the Norman Rockwell Museum, including such beloved and well-known images as Triple Self-Portrait (1960), Girl at Mirror (1954), Going and Coming (1947), and Art Critic (1955). The exhibition will include materials from the Norman Rockwell Museums archives demonstrating how Rockwell worked, proceeding from preliminary sketches, photographs, color studies and detailed drawings to the finished painting.
Five Themes in the Career of an American Icon Maker
American Chronicles traces the evolution of Rockwells art and iconography throughout his career from carefully choreographed reflections on childhood innocence in such paintings as No Swimming (1921) to powerful, consciousness-raising images like The Problem We All Live With (1964), which documented the traumatic realities of desegregation in the South. Commentary focusing on recurring personal themes, artistic and cultural influences, and the commercial climate that influenced Rockwells creative process will be woven throughout the exhibition.
The exhibition is divided into five thematic groups to demonstrate how Rockwells images provided Americans with a vocabulary for describing and celebrating themselves, their country and their experiences in the 20th century. Themes explored in the exhibition include: American Roots; Reflecting and Shaping American Character; Idealism, Attitude and the American Dream; Shaping the American Aesthetic; and The Artists Process, which offers insight into the development of Murder in Mississippi (1965), Rockwells haunting depiction of a civil rights tragedy in the South, from first idea to finished painting and published work. The exhibition will bring visitors into Rockwells creative process, tracing the artists complex, time-consuming working method, from original concept to the final painting and the published image. A complete set of all 323 of Rockwells covers for The Saturday Evening Post are also included in the exhibition. Rockwells work for the Post spanned a remarkable 47 years and the artist became a household name in the process.
The exhibition venues also include: Frist Center for the Visual Arts, Nashville, Tennessee November 1, 2013 through February 9, 2014; Fondazione Roma-Arte-Musei, Rome, Italy November 10, 2014 through February 8, 2015; and Brigham Young University Museum of Art, Provo, Utah, November 19, 2015 through February 13, 2016.