Tuesday, January 14, 2014

American mirror : the life and art of Norman Rockwell

View full imageby Deborah Solomon    (Get the Book)
Esteemed art critic and biographer Solomon turns our perception of Norman Rockwell inside out in this fast-paced yet richly interpretative inquiry. Rockwell became famous for creating 323 meticulously rendered, witty, and touching covers for the spectacularly popular Saturday Evening Post between 1916 and 1962. Precise in their detail and expressive in their psychology, Rockwell's narrative depictions of all-American small-town life are charming and rascally, yet Solomon discerns sorrow. She reads his many portraits of exuberant boys as a rewriting of his own unhappy past as a runty kid in cramped New York apartments. Drawing was his solace and illustration his goal, though for all his success, he felt anachronistic as abstract expressionism flourished, and his fastidious realism seemed quaint. But that wasn't his greatest source of frustration. A workaholic neat-freak, Rockwell whose first wife divorced him due to mental cruelty, and whose second, the mother of his three sons, became an institutionalized alcoholic was happiest in the company of young men. As Solomon points out manifestations of homoerotic desires in Rockwell's brilliantly composed paintings, her sensitivity to his struggles deepen appreciation for his virtuosic artistry and for his valor in using his work to champion civil rights and nuclear disarmament. Solomon's penetrating and commanding biography is brimming with surprising details and provocative juxtapositions, just like Rockwell's mesmerizing paintings. --Booklist

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