American Painting and Sculpture 1800-1945

The Love Song
Artist Rockwell, Norman
     nationality American
     birth-death 1894-1978
Creation date 1926
Materials oil on canvas
Dimensions 38 3/8 x 42 7/8 in. 42 3/8 x 47 1/8 in. (framed)
Location Art of the American West Gallery
Credit line Gift of Anne G. Blackman and Sidney W. Blackman in memory of Freeman E. Hertzel
Accession number 1997.151
Gallery Label

Love Song presents the artist's major theme, the different stages of life.  Here, a young girl wistfully listens to music played by two elderly men.  The painting's title is printed on the music sheet.  An old map suggests rural America.

Rockwell, America's premiere illustrator, created more than 300 Saturday Evening Post covers, capturing the daily lives of average Americans.

Indianapolis Museum of Art: Highlights of the Collection (2005)

Norman Rockwell's Love Song, which was reproduced as an illustration in the December 1926 issue of Ladies Home Journal, presents one of this popular artist's major themes: youth contrasted with old age. A young girl listens wistfully as two elderly men play the flute and the clarinet. Leaning against the metronome is a music sheet indicating the tune's-and the painting's-title, "The Love Song." Rockwell, an avid collector of antique maps, added an old map to the scene, enhancing its quaint setting.

Rockwell was born in New York City and trained at the Chase School of Art, the National Academy of Design, and the Art Students League. In 1910, he set up a studio in New Rochelle, New York, the home of such famous illustrators as J.C. Leyendecker and his brother Frank, and Howard Chandler Christy. Rockwell was a young man of thirty-two when he was commissioned to paint The Love Song, yet he had already been designing cover illustrations for the Saturday Evening Post for a decade. Between 1916 and 1961, Rockwell illustrated more than three hundred covers for that magazine alone. He produced some of the most recognizable images in American art, always treating his subjects-"average" Americans in everyday situations-with warmth and humor. In his later years, Rockwell became more political. His 1965 illustration The Problem We All Live With dealt with segregated education in the United States.

Maybe . . . I unconsciously decided that, even if it wasn't an ideal world, it should be and so [I] painted only the ideal aspects of it.
-Norman Rockwell, 1960

Descriptive tags added by visitors:

Americana, boredom, Chauvinism, cluttered, country life, day dreamer, day dreaming, details, dueling woodwinds, duet, heartache, homey, love, old fogies, pendulum, playful, travel, wall map, wooden floor, wood floor
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