Rockwell exhibit: Like roaming the family attic

The Tacoma Art Museum is showing a comprehensive traveling collection of Norman Rockwell's work through the end of May, detailing his process and showcasing more somber works alongside his iconic, upbeat Americana.

Rockwell exhibit: Like roaming the family attic
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Ashli Blow

The Tacoma Art Museum is showing a comprehensive traveling collection of Norman Rockwell's work through the end of May, detailing his process and showcasing more somber works alongside his iconic, upbeat Americana.

In  1943, Norman Rockwell — then America’s most popular artist, with  regular Saturday Evening Post covers, annual Boy Scout calendars, plus  scores of major U.S. advertising campaigns — was tapped by the Office  of War Information to create a series of posters titled "The Four  Freedoms." Based on the central content of President Roosevelt’s  January 1941 State of the Union Address, the posters were recognizably Rockwellian but  featured more serene and dignified characters than his usual paintings.

The four gentle, homey compositions — advocating Freedom of Speech,  Freedom of Worship, Freedom from Want, and Freedom from Fear — were  published as Saturday Evening Post covers in February-March 1943 to a great  public swoon. Yet according to Rockwell biographer Laura Claridge, the  entire Writers Division of the Office of War Information (OWI) resigned en masse to protest the  selection of Rockwell over Ben Shahn (and other more socially conscious  artists), citing in particular Rockwell’s commercial  ties to the Coca-Cola company, one of whose executives had been the  arbiter in the decision to choose Rockwell.

In  anger, Claridge wrote, Shahn and the OWI writers collaborated on a  poster featuring Lady Liberty holding a Coke can with the slogan: “The War that Refreshes — the Four Delicious Freedoms!”

Yet  the OWI directors were not disappointed. When the four Rockwell posters  went on tour to 16 cities across the country in 1943, in a tour co-sponsored  by the Saturday Evening Post, they drew an attendance of 1,222,000 people  and raised an unbelievable $130 million in poster sales for U.S. war  bonds.

Today,  the Americana illustrations and paintings of Norman Rockwell continue  to hustle — and deliver — on this country’s behalf.  According to figures released by Mary Melius, director of traveling exhibitions  at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Mass., tours of Rockwell imagery  and process are boosting attendance at regional museums throughout North  America. An average of 55,000 visitors are attending each three-month stop  of the major touring show, “American Chronicles,” featuring paintings  spanning Rockwell’s 50-year career. Museums are “very, very  pleased” with the show’s draw, said Melius, and it is currently  scheduled out through June 2013.

In  Tacoma, where “American  Chronicles: The Art of Norman Rockwell” is showing at Tacoma Art Museum (TAM) through the  end of May, attendance has been similarly booming. Even during a weekday,  you’ll find numerous families and other humming klatches circling  back and forth through the exhibit — and weekdays can be downright  crowded. Though she declined to release specific numbers yet, TAM's director of marketing and communication, Melissa Traver, said, “We are trending at a 30 percent increase over projected  attendance.”

Open since late February,  “American Chronicles” (aka “Rockwell’s  Rockwells”) features 44 paintings that the artist either kept or bought  back for his own collection,  plus 323 original Saturday Evening Post covers,  copies of the Four Freedoms posters, a short, looping biographical film,  and an in-depth display of Rockwell’s working process. Notes, staged photos of the characters, charcoal sketches, correspondence,   and final oils illustrate his efforts on one late-era painting: the  unusually somber and dramatic “Southern Justice ( Murder in Mississippi),”  Rockwell’s 1965 oil capturing the moment of slaughter of three civil-rights workers, commissioned to accompany an article by Charles Morgan, Jr., published in  Look magazine.

The  exhibit does an admirable job of broadly fleshing out the fullness of  Rockwell’s sensibility — from his early desire to entertain and  please (and make money) to his yearning in later years to address issues  of prejudice and civil rights.  In the same corner of the exhibit you’ll  find "If Your Wisdom  Teeth Could Talk They’d Say, ‘Use Colgate’s," a 1924 painting  for a Colgate dental cream advertisement, and “The Problem We All  Live With," Rockwell’s 1963 depiction of desegregation battles  for Look magazine, featuring a Ruby Bridges-type character bravely  marching to school in a perfect white dress.

Unsurprisingly,  “American Chronicles” serves as a colorful resurrection and recasting  of the plucky denizens associated with faded Rockwell merchandise: the boys fleeing with their clothes from an illicit swim ("No Swimming,"  1921); the adventures of a scrappy  pig-tailed girl ("Day in the  Life of a Little Girl," 1952); the bug-eyed kid who’s just found a Santa  suit in his parents’ bureau ("The  Discovery," 1956). Seen in gallery format, in oil at their original size (each approximately  2x3 feet to 3x4 feet), these overexposed scenes glow anew with color and narrative energy.

Though he  was known to overwork his paintings (throughout his life he painted  compulsively, seven days a week, nine hours a day),  Rockwell’s cataloguing  of detail in these oil portraits exudes pure good humor when seen live,  especially en masse. Proceeding through the show, the bad odors of the  nationalistic agenda that attached to Rockwell’s work are replaced  by a sense of one man’s individual, genuine appreciation of and attention  to all sorts of shadings of the human heart. As John Updike put it,  “Description expresses love,” and that sentiment is palpable when  staring into Rockwell’s painted  leather shoes, floppy tongues protruding, or a set of fresh comb marks  traced in a young boy’s greased hair.

The  show provides an experience not unlike roaming the idealized family  attic. Interesting, amusing  artifacts of historic eras (Post covers that move from two-color printing  to four-color process) sit alongside G-rated memorabilia (the turquoise-verdigris  of an old Chevy) and it all cements a story of familial love and social  bonds. What could be better?

Yet  an afternoon with Rockwell images also accumulates a lot of exaggerated  body parts and poses, and I felt unexpectedly battered, in the end,  by all the kids’ jutting elbows and knees, the old men’s lurching,  squatting gestures, and all the beaming, super-responsive faces.  According  to biographer Claridge, Rockwell had been instructed to exaggerate facial  expressions in his works so that readers could grasp his paintings’  meaning “within two seconds.” But why must the bodies be so acute,  too?

Only  on very rare occasions does Rockwell paint a physical environment for  his scenes, which adds to the looming feel of the characters.  It’s  all people and props, carefully staged for an easy read, unmetered from  place, making the only essential site in the exhibit Rockwell’s own  stool, which may be the source of that gangly physical intensity. The  artist spoke of never shedding the childhood physical feeling of being  “pigeon-toed, narrow shouldered — a lump,” and in an interesting anecdote about painting a portrait of actor Gary Cooper on one trip to Hollywood, Rockwell explains how the act of seeing Cooper brought him an intensified  sense of his own body. “When I looked at him,” he explained, “I  actually felt my narrow shoulder and puny arms.”

Perhaps  that’s part of the success of the greatest work on view, “Checkers  (1928),” an oil on canvas painted to accompany a story in Ladies  Home Journal featuring a downhearted, white-faced clown playing  cards with fellow circus people. Allowed to amplify the depressed,  clownish feeling that he was otherwise always fighting against, Rockwell   blends pathos and beauty into high art in this beautiful work. The small  dog at the bottom of the scene (which Rockwell admitted he often added to a painting to carry the emotion of the moment) has been put  to sleep, in a clown collar, in this portrait — he is not needed.    Seated on a stool in a shadowed, sunlit corner of a circus tent, Checkers  the lanky clown with a painted smile has just made a shrewd, engaging  move.

If you go: "American Chronicles: The Art of Norman Rockwell," through May 30 at Tacoma Art Museum, 1701 Pacific Ave., Tacoma, 253-272-4258. Tickets cost $9 ($8 for students, seniors, and military). Closed Mondays and Tuesdays. Advance tickets and details online.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal