Gallery Norman Rockwell and the Post: A Fruitful Relationship
How the Post empowered Norman Rockwell’s creative growth and expression.
How the Post empowered Norman Rockwell’s creative growth and expression.
Christmas candy wars, cassette tapes making a comeback, National Cookie Day recipes, and more in this week’s pop culture roundup.
Abigail Rockwell illustrates how her grandfather Norman Rockwell faced tragedy and hardship with humor.
Norman Rockwell struggled hard to portray American freedom on canvas, reports his granddaughter.
Rockwell’s comical, topsy-turvy series of covers brought levity to an America downtrodden by World War II.
Mary Doyle Keefe was a 19-year-old phone operator in Arlington, Vermont, when Rockwell called and asked if she wouldn’t mind posing for the soon-to-be iconic cover. Read the Post’s 2013 interview with Mary, who passed away this week at age 92.
In honor of the “Painter of Light,” we’re revisiting this 2003 feature on Thomas Kinkade and his sources of inspiration.
Who knew getting a haircut was such an artistic endeavor? Well, our cover artists, of course.
The Post honors the passing of the man in whom Norman Rockwell saw as the ideals of the American GI.
Shopping, decorating and lots of Santas: that’s what Saturday Evening Post Christmas covers are made of. But we wanted to remember those serving overseas this holiday season.
Today, readers still delight in scrutinizing these covers—and even find new errors from time to time. Can you spot all of them?
In his warm, witty, and utterly candid autobiography, first published in 1960, the beloved artist offered Post readers a glimpse into his life and the often mischievous world around him.
She didn’t want to be there. She didn’t want to be here. She just wanted to be somewhere else.
The meaning of religious liberty remains contested, part of the longstanding but evolving battle between exclusionary and inclusive visions of our community.
In this Spike Lee movie, five Vietnam vets go on a mission to find the remains of their platoon officer, but that’s only half the story.
In an interview with the Post, author and media scholar Marcus Gilroy-Ware talks about simultaneous crises in journalism and democracy.