Showing posts with label norman rockwell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label norman rockwell. Show all posts

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Review

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
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I just want to point out that this hardcover Everyman's Library edition is not abridged. Most of the reviews posted here apply to the Signet mass market edition, which apparently is abridged. The Everyman's edition contains both novels in full.

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The Unknown Rockwell: A Portrait of Two American Families Review

The Unknown Rockwell: A Portrait of Two American Families
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This is a story not to be missed! Not only does it chronicle the intertwining lives of the the Edgerton and Rockwell families, who lived next door to each other in Arlington, Vermont in the 40's and 50's but it transports you into a quieter, gentler time before the age of technology, to life on a dairy farm where all family members played a vital role in the the making or breaking of the business. It's about neighbors supporting and encouraging each other and the forging of a lifelong friendship between the Rockwells and the Edgertons. Buddy Edgerton, a former model for Norman Rockwell, writes the way he speaks, simply and directly, to immerse you in the past as he shares what life was like growing up on a farm and how his life was enriched and expanded when Norman Rockwell and his family bought the 1792 colonial farmhouse next to his in 1943. There have been many books written on Norman Rockwell, but this one stands head and shoulders above the rest as a first hand account of Norman Rockwell, his family and his relationship with the people and town of Arlington, Vermont - one that put the tiny village on the map for all time!

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Norman Rockwell's Faith of America Review

Norman Rockwell's Faith of America
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This book is great. The author talks to Norman Rockwell's widow several months after Mr. Rockwell's death and her words are enlightening. The author travels to two of Mr. Rockwells home towns and speaks with people who posed for many of the pictures.
It was heart warming reading this book while looking at the nearly 100 pictures the author describes in detail.
Paula McLeish

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More than one hundred heartwarming illustrations, many in full color, by the acclaimed artist offer an inspirational portrait of uniquely American towns, families, traditions, and more, all captured with Rockwell's trademark understanding of everyday human existence.

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Simple Acts of Faith: Heartwarming Stories of One Life Touching Another Review

Simple Acts of Faith: Heartwarming Stories of One Life Touching Another
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Simple Acts of Faith will undoubtedly be classified as a "coffee table book," yet such a bland modifier hardly does justice to this unique collection of heart-warming stories. For one, they breathe life into Norman Rockwell's ageless paintings, while the portraits tantalize one's senses. As I read this book, I felt moved, but not back to the mythical "good old days" that only existed in people's somewhat memory. Instead, I found myself grasping the reality that community still exists wherever people take the time to care about each other. Such heroic acts make love a reality, in spite of the mad pace of the 21st century. That is something worth celebrating - and taking time to make happen in our own communities.

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The beloved art of Normal Rockwell chronicles small-town Americaand reflects the simple kindnesses that paint ordinary life with shades of the extraordinary.This gathering of select Rockwell classics is joined by stories that illuminateacts of goodwill that transformed people's lives:

A cycle shop owner gives Lance Armstrong his first bike, and the rest is history.
The young, hurting Frank Peretti is shown compassion that opens up his heart.
One man's sharing of faith changed the life of shoe salesman Dwight L. Moody.

Norman Rockwell fans, Americanacollectors, and those who cherish an uplifting look at life will treasure thiscelebration of family, community, and the goodness that overflows from thesimplest acts of faith.

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American Chronicles: The Art of Norman Rockwell Review

American Chronicles: The Art of Norman Rockwell
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I thought this was a worthwhile overview of the life and work of Rockwell. Though it was published to coincide with an exhibition there are only five pages that relate to this in a checklist format of work. The rest of the book has three essays hung around New York, Vermont and Stockbridge where the artist lived and between these are pages of his work with detailed text.
Most of Rockwell's paintings in the book have been reproduced many times before but maybe not as well as here (with a 175 screen). What I did find new were several drawings and roughs from the early Fifties of Santa for Hallmark cards and a fascinating twenty-two page section on the background to Murder in Mississippi, a compelling painting completed in 1965. Included are letters, news clipping, reference photos for the two figures in the painting and painted roughs. Oddly Look Magazine, who commissioned the work, used a rather loose color study in the magazine rather than the finished work.
At the back of the book there are twenty-eight pages about Rockwell's various studios over the years with plenty of exterior and interior photos. All the paintings in the book are captioned with title, date and size. The size reference is interesting because Rockwell is seen as a realist painter, especially his Saturday Evening Post from the mid-forties but this is because when a canvas three or four feet deep is reduced to a magazine cover size (or as they appear in these pages) it concentrates all the detail to a near photographic feel. When you see a Rockwell painting close-up it clearly has a fine art look rather than a slick piece of commercial illustration.
Amazon lists plenty of books about this wonderful artist, many of them, I think, just seem to be cashing in on his name with poor selections and printing. This book should be included with the better ones because of its excellent editorial, design and printing.
***SEE SOME INSIDE PAGES by clicking 'customer images' under the cover.

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Norman Rockwell: The Underside of Innocence Review

Norman Rockwell: The Underside of Innocence
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While Norman Rockwell's paintings are generally seen as imagery of all-American virtues, values, individuals, and scenes, the John Hopkins English professor Halpern sees them as "more challenging and complex" than even the most sophisticated critics have imagined in the recent revival of interest in Rockwell; which revival has mostly reaffirmed the general regard of his paintings. Halpern looks to Rockwell's famous painting "Triple Self-Portrait" for indication--and in a way confession--that there was more to Rockwell's paintings than is realized from the first impressions of their imagery and recognition and often identification with their subjects. Rockwell's insistent, undying "jokey inventiveness," evidenced more directly in his autobiography "My Adventures as An Illustrator," is seen in the often overlooked details of his paintings. The woman in "Rosie the Riveter" celebrating American women's role in the war effort of WWII has Irish facial features which identify her with the ethnic and working classes, not the middle-class matrons, businessmen, and shop owners who see their mainstream, traditional values represented by Rockwell. Also, Rosie's muscular arms go against the typical image of women as slender and in need of male protection. Halpern similarly interprets details of other paintings to find symbols or intimations of homosexuality, voyeurism, and other sexually-laden topics. Halpern does not go so far as to make Rockwell out to be lascivious or meanly subversive. The author does, however, argue and abundantly demonstrate the point that Rockwell's paintings are more complex, more Freudian, than this painter openly admitted to and than nearly all viewers realize.

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Nostalgia's Thread: Ten Poems on Norman Rockwell Paintings Review

Nostalgia's Thread: Ten Poems on Norman Rockwell Paintings
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I've always loved Norman Rockwell's illustrations, so I jumped at a chance to review the book. When the slim chapbook arrived in the mail, I was first surprised that the ten* poems it contains were not accompanied by the Rockwell paintings of their titles.
But then it occurred to me: perhaps that is the point. I could have just looked up the painting online as I read the titles for each poem, but I decided to see if the free verse itself evoked the painting for me.
They did. Freisinger did an excellent job of describing each painting within its poem, with details that helped me recall it. I'm pretty familiar with Rockwell's work, though, and I'm not sure this approach would work for those who are not.
(*The ten paintings are really just nine - or eleven, considering that the tenth poem is about an imaginary painting based on two of Rockwell's other paintings.)
The first page of the book notes that the poems "remind us that visual art is never static, the beholder's eye never innocent. They bear witness to the fact that each cultural era must reinterpret its rich artistic inheritance within the context of its current collective experience." The publisher's website also states that "they were conceived just prior to the attacks of September 11, 2001, and written in their wake."
That probably explains the negative or depressing tone of the poems, which, besides an evocative description of the painting, also contain either a speculation about the life/lives of the subject(s) of the painting, or the reaction of poem's narrator who is viewing the painting. They speak of aging, death, grief, wife-beaters, estranged children. One poems ends, "what you long for most of all is one last graceful exit." I've always found Rockwell's work to be cheering or at least uplifting, so the desultory mood of these poems was a downer.
I also got the impression that the poet doesn't really like Rockwell's art. In one poem, he refers to "that first time he knew whose painting it was and he also knew he was not supposed to like it." In another, the narrator "studied art in college and remembered the dismissal and scorn her teachers preached for mere illustrations of The Real." All of the poems are rather cynical.
While I was puzzled by the abrupt and awkward division into stanzas in some of the poems, the lines themselves have lovely language and metaphors. All in all, this was a book that made me think, and not only to recall the painting described.

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The poems in Nostalgia's Thread offer an accessible and provocative reconsideration of the American experience as depicted in ten of Rockwell's best-known paintings. Arguably the only serious collection of poems inspired by Norman Rockwell's images, they were conceived just prior to the attacks of September 11th, 2001, and written in their wake.

These poems remind us that visual art is never static, the beholder's eye never innocent. They bear witness to the fact that each cultural era must reinterpret its rich artistic inheritance within the context of its current collective experience. With unflinching honesty and deep compassion, these poems present a personal and national past which is both comforting and disturbing, both "nostalgia'€™s thread" and "the barbed wire / of memory."


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Norman Rockwell (First Books--Biographies) Review

Norman Rockwell (First Books--Biographies)
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Rockwell's life story is a fascinating read, and this book features numerous beautiful, full-color reproductions of his work. The author makes a persuasive case for Rockwell as a genius whose work endures throught the decades, and it's an inspiring story for readers of all ages.

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Norman Rockwell's World of Scouting (A Fireside Book) Review

Norman Rockwell's World of Scouting (A Fireside Book)
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The book gives a brief history of Norman Rockwell's connection with Scouting and is one of the few, if not only, complete book of all of his Boy Scout works. "Green Bar Bill" Hillcourt does an excellent job of telling the story and how Norman Rockwell told the Scouting Story. A must for all Scouter's libraries.

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Norman Rockwell Review

Norman Rockwell
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The book is small, but the illustrations still are reproduced extremely well. The essay alone is worth every penny. If you feel uneasy about your love for the work of Norman Rockwell, this book will give you the courage to like what you really like, without any more appologies. Buy it, read it, enjoy. You will, I guarantee.

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How I Make a Picture Review

How I Make a Picture
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Anyone who thinks that what Norman Rockwell did was easy, or that it is not art, with a capital A, needs to read this book. Even given that by this stage of his career he relied heavily on the aid of photographs, and also given that in this book we can see his pictures emerge step-by-step, what Rockwell could do still seems nearly miraculous.
Most impressive to me is a series of photos documenting the creation of a charcoal sketch of a cowboy. We see how Rockwell projected a photograph of one of his models onto a sheet of paper, and how he carefully traced all the lines. Easy, right? Then, he went on to utterly transform the tracing into something entirely different from, and entirely more life-like, than the original photo.
Any artist working in the area of realism, and especially any artist relying on photographs to achieve that realism, will benefit from this book.

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Norman Rockwell: A Life (Modern Library Paperbacks) Review

Norman Rockwell: A Life (Modern Library Paperbacks)
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I've been an illustrator for 40 years. My mentor was a contemporary of Rockwell, also an illustrator and portrait painter who was at the Art Student's League at about the same time as NR. I was all set to like this book after viewing the attractive and articulate author on BookNotes. It turned out to be a chore to read. I'm surprised that Random didn't do more fact checking or editing. It is not so much narrative as it is cut-and-paste word processing. Consider this line for example on page 394: "But at least one son, Jarvis -- who, on finding that he had did not fit particularly well into the Air Force ...." Where are the copy editors when you need them?
Then there are the significant errors, as in the following: [page 209] "First, he recalled briefly the beauty contest he had judged a few years before with Clare Briggs the cartoonist and Nell Brinkley the actress." A simple search on Google will confirm that Nell Brinkley (1886-1944) was also famous as a cartoonist who drew pretty young things for the New York Evening Journal, and not an actress.
On page 300, the author describes a painting of Willie Gillis in church: "In the three pews, shown, only Willie's torso and face are visible; the shoulder of a man in front, and the arm of a man behind, their respective officer and upper enlisted stripes prominent...." This is a curious description coming from someone who taught at the Naval Academy. There is no man shown in front, just the shoulder boards of a US Navy commander. As for the upper enlisted stripes, she should have said hash marks and the distinctive stripes of a First Sergeant (three stripes, two rockers, and a diamond).
The author continually refers to Rockwell's clients as patrons, a term I have never heard used by illustrators or other so-called commercial artists. She also goes to great length to chastise NR for continually accepting more work than he had time to do. This has always been common practice. Some clients bail out after reviewing sketches or comprehensives, or for purely business reasons, which is why kill-fees are used to protect freelancers from spinning their wheels. Anyone who has ever engaged carpenters or other tradesmen knows that they, too, overbook. People who work for themselves have to overbook, if they expect to survive.
The author, as academic, devotes much of the book to psychobabble and pronouncements from on high, making it seem that the Golden Age of Illustration had passed Rockwell by. She refers to the obvious giants such as Pyle, Wyeth, Parrish, and others, who rode in on the waves of four-color process printing as it was first perfected for print production. But consider that Rockwell was the most famous illustrator ever, with an enormous following, and this added years to the Golden Age of Illustration as technical advances continued. It also added many more excellent illustrators, Rockwell's fellow instructors at the Famous Artists School to name a few.
NR's buddies in Arlington, Vermont -- Mead Schaeffer, and John Atherton -- are mentioned often in that period of Rockwell's life, but they are never adequately fleshed out as individuals, Then, we are told that they left Arlington without explaining why.
There are no examples of their work. There are two signatures of photo reproductions reduced to sizes too small to be of much pictorial value. One would really need Arthur Guptill's book on Rockwell, or another compilation of NR's work to understand what the author is talking about as she describes paintings that are either too small to be studied, or do not appear at all.
I wish the text had been cut by a third, elimating all those distant cousins, who add little, or nothing, to the story, and two signatures of full page 4/c process illustrations added, even if it would mean an increase to the cover price.

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In Search of Norman Rockwell's America Review

In Search of Norman Rockwell's America
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Norman Rockwell's images of American life have resonated with us for generations now. Nearly all of us have seen these iconic portraits of an American life that we universally want to embrace as our own experience.
How many of us have searched for an experience of life in America reflected in Rockwell's captured moments of American normalcy? Even I have gazed at this paintings and imagined the joy of living in these moments.
Kevin Rvioli has done just that. With his own eye and camera, he has photographed this very real version of Rockwell's America. He has successfully captured the spirit of Rockwell's America and what a surprise! Rockwell's America is our America.
Rivoli's skill at matching his captures with Rockwell's paintings is outstanding. Page after page exhibits just how much of Rockwell's world is part of our own.
And perhaps Rivoli has unlocked the secret of Rockwell himself. In place of a camera, Rockwell may well have captured actual moments with his paintings and not an idealized version of America, but in fact a flesh and blood reality that Rivoli shows is alive and well in America.
So take the journey back to Rockwell's America and discover how close it really is.

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In this unprecedented collection, photojournalist Kevin Rivoli proves that the idealistic, all-American views found in Norman Rockwell's classic illustrations are, in fact, accurate and timeless portrayals of a nation that truly does exist. Some critics argue that Norman Rockwell's images are overly sentimental, old-fashioned, and contrived. Yet it was always photojournalist Kevin Rivoli's belief that the themes that make Rockwell's illustrations so poignant -- patriotism, faith, family, and sports -- are also what make our country so great. Determined to dispel the critics' claims against Rockwell's prolific body of work, Rivoli set out with his camera to visit small towns and capture spontaneous Rockwell moments that celebrate the glory of ordinary, everyday life. In Search of Norman Rockwell's America pairs Rivoli's photographs side by side with Norman Rockwell's iconic paintings, demonstrating how Rockwell's scenes were not just imagined on a canvas since they continue to sensitively reflect the American experience today. Each page of In Search of Norman Rockwell's America is filled with inspiring quotes and anecdotes from those who have been touched by Rockwell, including Arnold Palmer, Dick Clark, Beau Bridges, Dolly Parton, former president Jimmy Carter, and even the original subjects of Rockwell's artwork. A must-have for photographers, artists, Rockwell enthusiasts, and those desiring to slow down and focus on what's really important in life -- embracing those special Rockwell moments.

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50 Norman Rockwell Favorites Review

50 Norman Rockwell Favorites
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I have to agree with the previous reviewer that this book represents exceptional value. If you just want to look at the book then these prints are more than large enough for clear and detailed viewing. If you wanted to take the book apart and use them as wall prints they are also large enough for that. I am going to laminate them for use in my US History class.
Two complaints: This is one of those art books that won't work well on a shelf. It's very tall and a little thin, so if there isn't good support it's going to get folded. The other thing is only a problem if you want to use them as posters. The picture information is printed on the left hand page of each print. If you want to look at it as a book that works out perfect. If you want to use them as posters it means that what is printed on the back of each print is information that belongs to another print. I'm pretty sure the publishers weren't worried about people tearing the pages up.

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Norman Rockwell's Christmas Book: Revised and Updated Review

Norman Rockwell's Christmas Book: Revised and Updated
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I own the original 1977 edition of this book so when I saw this 2009 revised edition I bought 2 - one for each of my daughters who are now grown and married. They enjoyed looking at and being read to from my copy of the book with me when they were little. They were both thrilled with this pre-holiday treat I presented to them when they came home at Thanksgiving. So pleased was I with the new book, I bought 3 more as gifts for bosses from a group of staff co-workers and another for an old friend!
The contents of art and stories are a quaint and lovely collection sure to provide enjoyment for years, I think. It has done that for me anyway. Rockwell was such a talented artist whose work defined a generation of Americans.

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Norman Rockwell: Artist and Illustrator Review

Norman Rockwell: Artist and Illustrator
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My family is artsy, and when I was little, my dad or my uncle (I was too young to notice) gave this book to Grandpa for Christmas. It was the BIG GIFT that year. We all ooohed and aaahed over it. Grandpa and Grandma handled it so reverently. Whenever I would visit Grandpa and Grandma, I loved to sit down and look at every picture. (I had to wash my hands first.) This is a big book, like a coffee table book, with many, many pictures in full color, and big enough to see all the details. I could see how he painted each picture, how he handled the light, the expressions on the faces, how he made each person seem like someone you knew (or yourself), and how he make each story in the paintings reveal itself. The pictures are not shrunken down, black-and-white half-tones. They are reproduced like fresh Post Covers. I would sit there for a long time absorbing every page. I don't know if it has EVERY post cover, but it seems to, as well as other things like calendar pictures. When I grew up, I wanted that book so badly, so I went to a used book store (before the Internet) and bought it for $80, which was a lot for a young adult, but worth it. If you can get it for less, more power to you. This has more Norman Rockwell pictures than another Norman Rockwell book that I have ever seen. So if you only get one Norman Rockwell book, this is the one to get(except for his autobiography, which is hilarious.)

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A study of the artist and illustrator, Norman Rockwell, which reproduces 600 of his best illustrations, providing a panorama of nearly 60 years of American social history.

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BSA Norman Rockwell's Boy Scouts of America Review

BSA Norman Rockwell's Boy Scouts of America
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When I was a scout, the paintings of Norman Rockwell set the tone of what scouting was. Or should be. When I got the 9th edition of the Boy Scout Handbook, I loved the use of Rockwell's painting in it.
There was also a great book by William Hillcourt ("Green Bar Bill") on Rockwell's work. It collected his calender artwork and some (too few) of his other Boy Scout work. It was a while before I could find a copy, but it became an important part of my collection of scouting works.
Now, in time for the BSA's 100th Anniversary, we have this excellent book presenting all of Rockwell's Boy Scout calender artwork, as well as Joseph Csatari's work, which continued the tradition. In addition, we see some of Rockwell's other Boy Scout artwork. And we get some great writeups and extra information about many of the pieces (and the people in them). For some, this is the first time I've seen them in larger size, and I picked up details I wasn't aware of previously.
If I have any complaint, its that with a few of the pieces, we don't get a large size color picture. One was reproduced in black and white, and a few were reproduced in smaller size, showing their use as Boys' Life covers and the like. I would have really liked to have seen all the pieces reproduces as full page color pieces.
But still, this is a great book, and one every scouting family should have.

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Since the beginning of the Scouting movement in America 100 years ago, events have been recorded in paintings and drawings by an official artist. Remarkably, there have been just two official artists in all that time: Norman Rockwell and Joseph Csatari. Through brushstrokes of oil paint on canvas, the artists chronicle the history of Scouting in America - from campouts, hikes, and pinewood derby races to the Scouts public service initiatives throughout their long history. Their artwork celebrates the boyhood joys of Scouting whilst illustrating a code of honor and ideals that has shaped generations of young men.

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