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Google Drowns Norman Rockwell Museum

Comments (3)
Thursday, February 11, 2010

Stockbridge's Norman Rockwell Museum experienced an unexpected temporary crash of its website last Wednesday, Feb. 3 due to a surge in Internet traffic brought on by a Google tribute to the artist on his 116th birthday. Google, as it has been known to do for special occasions, modified the banner on its primary search engine site at www.google.com that day in imitation of the Rockwell painting "Boy and Girl Gazing at Moon (Puppy Love)," also sometimes known as "Little Spooners," a tribute which channeled some 1,000 hits per second to the museum's under-muscled URL. The painting was originally featured on the April 24, 1926 cover of the Saturday Evening Post.

Rockwell is perhaps the most recognized American artist of the last century. His work included war posters, book and magazine illustrations for Boys' Life, Look magazine, Popular Science, Literary Digest and 322 covers for the Post, his best-known employer (June 3, 1916 issue pictured). He was commissioned to paint several portraits in his lifetime, including portraits of Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon, as well as foreign leaders Gamal Abdel Nasser and Jawaharlal Nehru.

His family lived principally in New Rochelle, N.Y. and Stockbridge, Mass., where the Norman Rockwell Museum maintains a 36-acre site overlooking the Housatonic River Valley. The site includes the artist's original studio (transported from its first location on Stockbridge's Main Street) and a museum that preserves his complete archives, as well as hosting several exhibits annually that showcase the work of other American illustrators. The Museum is currently featuring a book and exhibition entitled "Norman Rockwell: Behind the Camera," and has been garnering high marks for its traveling show "American Chronicles: The Art of Norman Rockwell."

Comments (3)
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Bravo! As an artist/illustrator Rockwell has been my hero for ages. He walked the fine line between the Painter and the commerical Illustrator. From social satire to direct political commentary Rockwell built a career that allowed him to create art on his own terms. The museum is a must for any artist and/or history buff.
Posted by fonsecagraphics on 2.10.10 at 10:42
Actually, the Rockwell family spent 14 years in West Arlington, Vermont PRIOR to going to Massachusetts and had no real intention to leave Vermont, but did so after Mary Rockwell sought treatment in MA.I'm surprised you don't mention this in your article. For more about Norman Rockwell and his life raising his three sons, the time he lived in Vermont (and the time, arguably, that was the most prolific in his career when he illustrated the Four Freedoms, Breaking Home Ties, Rosie the Riveter, etc.), there is a wonderful book that is endorsed by the Rockwell Family and The Norman Rockwell Museum, The Unknown Rockwell. I found it to be very informative, because I also had always thought Norman was mostly in MA.
Posted by Elizabeth Andosca on 2.10.10 at 12:59
It should be noted that Rockwell spent 14 of his 84 years in Arlington. But the claims that his most prolific period took place there is misleading, provincial nonsense.
Posted by chris on 2.11.10 at 4:53
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