Working on the Statue of Liberty

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Working on the Statue of Liberty
(Statue of Liberty)
StatueOfLiberty-NormalRockwell.jpg
ArtistNorman Rockwell
Year1946
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions54.61 cm × 43.02 cm (2112 in × 161516 in)
LocationWhite House

Working on the Statue of Liberty, also known as Statue of Liberty, is a 1946 oil painting by American illustrator Norman Rockwell, showing workmen cleaning the torch held aloft by the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor.[1]

Creation[]

The painting was created for the cover of an edition of The Saturday Evening Post, published on 6 July 1946,[2] from sketches that Rockwell made in March 1946. It depicts the cleaning of the amber-coloured glass of the torch, an operation undertaken annually each July.[3] Rockwell focuses on just a small part of the Statue of Liberty – the torch, a 42 feet (13 m) long arm, and part of the head of the colossal statue, silhouetted against a clear summer blue. Five workmen are attached to the statue by ropes, including one who is a caricature of Rockwell himself, and one African-American in a red shirt. The inclusion of a non-white figure working with whites, apparently only noticed in 2011,[3] contravened a Saturday Evening Post policy of only showing people of ethnicity in subservient roles.[4]

Display in the Oval Office[]

The painting came into the possession of Steven Spielberg, who donated it to the permanent art collection of the White House in 1994. It was displayed in the Oval Office during the administrations of Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama, sometimes to the left of the President's desk, above a cabinet or table on which was displayed Frederic Remington's sculpture The Bronco Buster.[5][2] It was later moved by Obama to a position next to the fireplace, above a bust of Martin Luther King Jr.[6][4] In January 2017, shortly after the inauguration of Donald Trump, the painting was still in the Oval Office.[7] It was reportedly removed later in 2017, in favor of a portrait of Andrew Jackson.[8]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Statue of Liberty". Digital Library, White House Historical Association.
  2. ^ a b Ray, Heather (9 January 2010). "Obama's Rockwell". The Saturday Evening Post.
  3. ^ a b Petrick, Jane Allen (October 22, 2013). Hidden in Plain Sight: The Other People In Norman Rockwell's America. Informed Decisions Publishing. ISBN 978-0989260114.
  4. ^ a b Rockwell, Abigail (21 November 2016). "Who Moved The Norman Rockwell Painting In The Oval Office?". The Huffington Post.
  5. ^ "Norman Rockwell, Welcome Guest in The White House". Norman Rockwell Museum.
  6. ^ Jones, Jonathan (23 November 2016). "Norman Rockwell's Statue of Liberty can point Trump towards decency". The Guardian.
  7. ^ Voon, Claire (January 24, 2017). "In Oval Office Rehang, Trump Continues to Copy Others". hyperallergic.com. Retrieved May 14, 2017.
  8. ^ Alexander, Harriet (August 23, 2017). "Donald Trump's Oval Office renovation leads Washington on a game of spot the difference". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved April 7, 2018.

External links[]

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