If you say grace tomorrow, you could do worse than thanking God for the four freedoms enumerated by Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Freedom from Want, 1943, Norman Rockwell
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I had a painting teacher who hated Norman Rockwell. She was in agreement with the art establishment of her time, which derided him as âjust an illustrator.â They also rebelled against his view of America, but that wasnât what she said. âHe has no sense of perspective,â she told me. âHe just layers objects to give the illusion of depth.â
For some of his cover art that was true. Consider The Runaway (below), painted for the September 20, 1958 cover of the Saturday Evening Post. Itâs just three figures square to the picture plane, surrounded by the horizontal lines and miscellany of the soda shop counter. If that was the only Rockwell painting you ever saw, you could be forgiven for thinking as she did.
Compare that with Shiner (also below), from the May 23, 1953 cover of the same magazine. The little girl is again square to the picture plane, but there is a second focal point at the top right. Theyâre tied together by the linoleum. Weâre seeing the subject from a kid-height viewpoint. Rockwell understood perspective quite well, thank you.
The Runaway, 1958, Norman Rockwell
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Freedom from Want was painted during World War II as part of Norman Rockwellâs Four Freedoms series. The series was meant to illustrate a passage from President Franklin Rooseveltâs State of the Union address of January 6, 1941, when Nazi Germany occupied most of Western Europe. The paintings were so idiosyncratically American, however, that they instead have come to represent American values. Freedom from Want is now irrevocably entwined with the American holiday season, which kicks off tomorrow.
The foil for the whole painting is the white-on-white table, surrounded by a wreath of faces. If youâve ever wondered about Rockwell as a painter, study that table. Heâs as brilliant with the whites as JoaquĂn Sorolla, albeit in a much more American way.
Shiner, 1953, Norman Rockwell
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The table is significantly foreshortened and the centerpieceâa fruit bowlâis at the very bottom of the picture. That and the truncated faces at the bottom make you wonder how much longer the table actually is.
This clever cropping make you think youâre looking at a snapshot of someoneâs dinner. Of course, youâre not. He painted the figures from life, using his friends and neighbors as models. About the turkey, Rockwell said, âOur cook cooked it, I painted it and we ate it. That was one of the few times I’ve ever eaten the model.â
Note that thereâs almost no other food on the table. Such is the magic of his realism that Rockwell makes you believe itâs an overloaded table. In fact, that was the criticism of it at the time, that it depicted indulgence while Europe was starving.
Of course, Thanksgiving is a meal of excess. (I myself plan to make seven pies today.) But if you say grace tomorrowâand I hope you doâyou could do worse than thanking God for the four freedoms enumerated by President Roosevelt all those years ago:
Freedom of Speech
Freedom from Want
Freedom from Fear
Freedom of Worship
This was originally published in 2017. Have a very blessed holiday!