Welcome to the Best Selection of Norman Rockwell Prints and Posters!

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Norman Rockwell is one of America’s most beloved artists (1894 – 1978) because his whimsical paintings represent everyday life in America.  We know him most from his illustrations for the covers of Post and Look magazines.

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The Runaway

This might be one of Norman Rockwell’s most popular prints.  It’s a giclee print on archival paper, so the quality is the best.  Representative of the artwork that Norman Rockwell did for “Boys’ Life” which was the official publication for the Boy Scouts of America.  Norman Rockwell painted what we consider to be scenes from everyday life in small town America, and this print certainly depicts that.

Golden Rule

The Golden Rule is one of the most loved pieces of artwork done by Norman Rockwell.  Certainly some of the inspiration that we need in these modern times that would teach us to love others.  So representative of the peoples of the world and the U.S. working together for peace.  Norman Rockwells’ Golden Rule poster is popular today but the original idea sat in Norman Rockwell’s attic for a year as initial sketches before he got around to the painting.  In this painting, Rockwell wanted to depict a tolerance and love for all peoples on the earth.


Sunset

Yet another American favorite of Norman Rockwell prints.  Is this normal everyday life for American kids?  Out fishing, with the dog and the girlfriend, looking at the sunset.  That’s how we want to remember it, anyway.  This is a museum-quality giclee print on archival paper.  Available in 3 different sizes.  Norman Rockwell illustrated for the Saturday Evening Post, and over his lifetime, he created 321 covers for Post magazine. He later worked for Look magazine, and there he did a lot of art depicting political issues — civil rights, poverty, etc.

Without thinking too much about it in specific terms, I was showing the America I knew and observed to others who might not have noticed.
Norman Rockwell

In 1943 Norman Rockwell was inspired by President Roosevelts‘ address to Congress, and that’s when Rockwell decided to paint the Four Freedoms paintings.  They are extremely well-known pieces of art and were included in four issues of The Saturday Evening Post.  These extremely popular works of art also toured the U.S. after that in an exhibit sponsored by the Saturday Evening Post and the U.S. Treasury.  In the process, the exhibit raised more than $130 million by selling war bonds, for the war effort.