I recently came across
an illustration of a lineman painted by the late, great artist Noman Rockwell.
The Lineman caught
my attention as my late father, Edward M. Davis, was a lineman after serving in
the Navy as a UDT frogman during WWII.
The Lineman
was used in a Bell Telephone advertisement, which stated that the lineman “helps
get the message through.”
The Norman Rockwell Museum
offers the below:
Humor and wit were
central aspects of Norman Rockwell’s character. From his first Saturday
Evening Post cover, Boy with Baby Carriage, in 1916 to his thematic No
Swimming paintings to The Gossips, Rockwell filled a societal niche
by providing levity during times of great strife. As Pablo Picasso noted, “the
purpose of art is washing the dust of daily life off our souls.”
Through two World Wars, the Great Depression, civil rights struggles, and the wars in Korea and Vietnam, Norman Rockwell’s paintings presented Americans with a window into a more idyllic world.
Through two World Wars, the Great Depression, civil rights struggles, and the wars in Korea and Vietnam, Norman Rockwell’s paintings presented Americans with a window into a more idyllic world.
Though Rockwell is
often regarded for paintings that addressed serious issues occurring at the
moment of their creation, a great deal of Rockwell’s oeuvre is reflective of
his sense of humor and natural playfulness.
You can visit the
Norman Rockwell Museum via the below link:
https://www.nrm.org/
https://www.nrm.org/
Note:
The above painting is Norman Rockwell’s self-portrait.
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