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Featured Hand Painted
Fine Art Reproduction
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Born on February 3, 1894 in New York City
to Jarvis Waring and Ann Mary (Hill) Rockwell. Rockwell transferred from high school
to the Chase Art School at the age of 16. He then went
on to the National Academy of Design, and finally,
to the Art Students League, where
he was taught by Thomas Fogarty and George
Bridgman. Rockwells early works were done for St. Nicholas Magazine, the Boy Scouts of America publication Boys Life,
and other juvenile publications. Joseph
Csatari carried on his legacy and style for the BSA. As a student,
Rockwell was given smaller, less important jobs. Rockwells first major
breakthrough came in 1912 at age 18 with his first book illustration for C.H. Claudy's Tell Me Why: Stories about Mother
Nature. Norman Rockwell was very prolific, and produced over 4000 original art
works, most of which have been either destroyed by fire or are in permanent
collections. Original magazines in mint condition that contain his art work are
extremely rare and can command thousands of dollars today. Many of his art works
appear overly sweet in modern critics eyes, especially the Saturday Evening
Post covers, which tend toward idealistic or sentimentalized portrayals of
American life, this has led to the often depreciatory adjective Rockwellesque.
The Marriage License is a Saturday Evening Post cover from June 11, 1955
and belongs with the finest examples of Rockwells art. The contrast between the
young couple and the old marriage-license clerk is conventional enough, but the
cliche is transcended by the quality of the painting
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