Norman Rockwell - Major Works

Major Works

  • Scout at Ship's Wheel (first published magazine cover illustration, Boys' Life, September 1913)
  • Santa and Scouts in Snow (1913)
  • Boy and Baby Carriage (1916; first Saturday Evening Post cover)
  • Circus Barker and Strongman (1916)
  • Gramps at the Plate (1916)
  • Redhead Loves Hatty Perkins (1916)
  • People in a Theatre Balcony (1916)
  • Tain't You (1917; first Life magazine cover)
  • Cousin Reginald Goes to the Country (1917; first Country Gentleman cover)
  • Santa and Expense Book (1920)
  • Mother Tucking Children into Bed (1921; first wife Irene is the model)
  • No Swimming (1921)
  • Santa with Elves (1922)
  • Doctor and Doll (1929)
  • Deadline (1938)
  • The Four Freedoms (1943)
    • Freedom of Speech (1943)
    • Freedom of Worship (1943)
    • Freedom from Want (1943)
    • Freedom from Fear (1943)
  • Rosie the Riveter (1943)
  • Going and Coming (1947)
  • Bottom of the Sixth (or The Three Umpires; 1949)
  • The New Television Set (1949)
  • Saying Grace (1951)
  • The Young Lady with the Shiner (1953)
  • Girl at Mirror (1954)
  • Breaking Home Ties (1954)
  • The Marriage License (1955)
  • The Scoutmaster (1956)
  • The Runaway (1958)
  • A Family Tree (1959)
  • Triple Self-Portrait (1960)
  • Golden Rule (1961)
  • The Problem We All Live With (1964)
  • Southern Justice (Murder in Mississippi) (1965)
  • New Kids in the Neighborhood (1967)
  • Russian Schoolroom (1967)
  • The Rookie
  • Spirit of 76 (1976) (stolen in 1978 but recovered in 2001 by the FBI's Robert King Wittman)

Read more about this topic:  Norman Rockwell

Famous quotes containing the words major and/or works:

    Self-centeredness is a natural outgrowth of one of the toddler’s major concerns: What is me and what is mine...? This is why most toddlers are incapable of sharing ... to a toddler, what’s his is what he can get his hands on.... When something is taken away from him, he feels as though a piece of him—an integral piece—is being torn from him.
    Lawrence Balter (20th century)

    Any balance we achieve between adult and parental identities, between children’s and our own needs, works only for a time—because, as one father says, “It’s a new ball game just about every week.” So we are always in the process of learning to be parents.
    Joan Sheingold Ditzion, Dennie, and Palmer Wolf. Ourselves and Our Children, by Boston Women’s Health Book Collective, ch. 2 (1978)