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Rockwell came up with the idea for the painting when traveling by train with servicemen and their families. [1] The models posed for the reference photos in an unused rail car on a siding of the Rutland Railway. Rockwell was displeased with the area around the heads of the couple in his sketch that led to the final painting and covered the area ...
Rockwell is among the figures depicted in Our Nation's 200th Birthday, The Telephone's 100th Birthday (1976) by Stanley Meltzoff for Bell System which Meltzoff based on Rockwell's 1948 painting The Gossips. [65] In the film Empire of the Sun, a young boy (played by Christian Bale) is put to bed by his loving parents in a scene also inspired by ...
Breaking Home Ties is a painting by American illustrator Norman Rockwell, created for the September 25, 1954, cover of The Saturday Evening Post.The picture represents a father and son waiting for a train that will take the young man to the state university.
"Rockwell's art captures the American spirit and simple moments in life - which is why his work is such a great match for Coca-Cola," said Ted Ryan, archives director for The Coca-Cola Company ...
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Children Dancing at a Party, produced by Norman Rockwell, was used as the cover for the January 26, 1918 issue of The Saturday Evening Post. [1] This painting has also been called Boy Stepping on Girl's Toe and Pardon Me. The original painting, oil on canvas measuring 23x19 inches, is in the collection of the National Museum of American ...
Joseph Csatari (born 1929, South River, New Jersey, as son of Hungarian immigrants) is a realist artist who worked with Norman Rockwell.As a boy, Csatari had painstakingly recreated Saturday Evening Post covers that Rockwell had painted.
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