Norman Rockwell

Approval Rate: 63%

63%Approval ratio

Reviews 18

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    gris2575

    Fri Feb 26 2010

    He was a very Talented magazine artist. He painted that Corny slice of Mayberry Americana that many of the elderly seem to get so Nostalgic over. He painted an America that did not exist, he did it well, he had a talent for it, but it was not there. It was all white -bread, conservative takes, made lightly for Magazines. Nothing hard hitting, no real Soul or depth to them. I was going to Rate him three stars until I remembered The Problem we all Live with. Such a drastic departure from the perfect World he normally created. The Problem we all Live With is raw, gritty, real, dramatic and Devastating. If you are not familiar with it, it is the story of Ruby Bridges, the little girl who was the first to go to a Desegregated Louisiana school. She is shown being escorted as tomatoes are being thrown at her by Racist bastards. It is so powerful, because she is just an innocent kid, the Victim of prejudices she is likely too Young to even understand. For that Painting, I bump him up a sta... Read more

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    irishgit

    Sun Nov 09 2008

    Very competent magazine illustrator. A ton of technical skill, but his work has the depth of a holiday greeting card.

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    brownie

    Sat Jul 02 2005

    De Kooning collected norman Rockwell.

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    pondexter

    Tue Apr 06 2004

    Shows that Capitalism may be the best economic system, but is definitely not conducive to producing great art. Rockwell is an extremely successful illustrator and extremely mediocre fine artist, although proclaiming his work as a 'major disservice to our collective consciousness' is laughably over the top.

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    enkidu

    Fri Nov 28 2003

    Platitudes on paper. One of the most indecently awful artists ever to acquire the name. Squidgy, corny, gagworthy and utterly wretched, and desperately in need of a National Lampoon retrospective.

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    moosekarloff

    Fri Oct 03 2003

    This man was an illustrator really, as the bulk of his work was executed for use in popular magazines of his time. He did have very fine, clean, acomplished technique: balanced colorist, remarkably skillful and adroit with the brush, understood the trickery of light in pictorial space, etc., but it takes more than that to be a great artist. To begin with, there's nothing innovative or daring about his work and Rockwell avoided addressing the mechanical problems of painting in favor of churning out easily-recognizable, non-threatening, easily-digestible, tepid, feelgood renderings that were firmly entrenched in the conventional and sentimental. In this, his work in highly decorative. Secondly, Rockwell tried to compete with the photograph in his ultra-realistic depictions of material reality, and by the time he came along, artists had long abandoned this effort due to its futility and took painting to a different and higher conceptual plane. Rockwell failed to follow this cultural ... Read more

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    brokenwing

    Tue Jul 15 2003

    He was very popular amongst the white supremacy crowd, but I am not a part of their society sooo.....Rockwell isn't exactly my type.

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    dizzyc

    Tue Jul 08 2003

    He is vastly overrated. His art is boring and insipid and conforming.

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    crystal_lovestorm

    Mon Jun 30 2003

    What was this loser trying to say? You have to be wholesome?!?!? Wholesomeness is overrated. He didn't depict realism, He depicted his little happy society.

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    karakas

    Fri Jun 20 2003

    White Trailer Trash Propagonda.

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    ladyshark4534

    Fri Jun 13 2003

    God, I hate this guy. His coloring skills look like he puked and fecal matter and painted with that! Compare some of his 1940's crap to Bill Stoneham's The hands That Resist Him. Stoneham actually has skills. Norman Rockwell just painted fake wholesome scenes.

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    solenoid_dh

    Tue Mar 05 2002

    The most moving and nostalgic artist I know of. One painting could tell an entire story. His work appealed to the best in us. He made me wish I could be an artist like that.

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    errol4e1

    Tue Feb 26 2002

    I am rating him as an illustrator rather than a fine artist. But as an illustrator he is one of my heroes. He rendered things realistically and his work is esthetically pleasing. And all of his illustrations told a little story.

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    molfan

    Mon Feb 11 2002

    Norman Rockwell is one of my favorite artists. His work is a slice of America. Painting his portraits to show everyday life. His paintings go from the early 1900s to about the 1970s{not too sure when he stopped painting}. His eye for detail in his paintings is remarkable. His paintings can be humorous, serious, and heartwarming.

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    lord_of_the_waves

    Sun Nov 04 2001

    Good ol' boy. Did some hick art and everyone loves him. Its not powerful or moving. It is also much to darkly shaded for what he intended. Norman attempted to be a political speaker via painting but did a poor job.

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    medgarevers

    Wed Sep 26 2001

    Sure, he got a lot of jobs that could qualify him as a "commercial artist," but his paintings had such humor and things that people could relate to back in the day and even nowadays. I think the first time I actually appreciated an art museum was when I visited the Rockwell Museum. I have a print of his painting of him painting himself (you have to see it to believe it). Other favorites of mine are Gossip, The Problem We Live With (an African-American girl being escorted to school by military officers), and of course the Four Freedoms.

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    milehijp

    Wed Jun 13 2001

    Almost no one could capture Americana like Rockwell could. Much of his work is so memorable. Far in the future people will be able to glimpse back into how simple life was at one time.

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    castlebee

    Wed May 02 2001

    I appreciate his great skill as an illustrator. However, over the years, his work has become so over-exposed and over-marketed it has really become kind of monotonous and about as interesting as your 20th trip to Disneyland - you can still appreciate it but there certainly aren't going to be any surprises. Overall, he was very successful in capturing the sentimental, sweet, and comic side of life with a certain amount of truth mixed liberally with mid-twentieth century idealism.