The 12 Blessings of Christmas
The holiday season is a time of joy, reflection, and wonder for people of all faiths.
The holiday season is a time of joy, reflection, and wonder for people of all faiths.
A 1948 Post article questions what we know about the holiday that started as a three-day picnic and Pilgrim sporting event.
Remember black-and-white Westerns and sandlot baseball? Our classic covers show what being a youngster was like in postwar America.
The Post’s great cover artists had a knack for placing the viewer right in the painting, whether riding horseback through golden forests or picking apples in a lush orchard.
Constantin Alajalov John Atherton McClelland Barclay Paul Bransom John Clymer Stevan Dohanos Michael Dolas John Falter Anton Otto Fischer Alan Foster Guy Hoff John Newton Howitt George Hughes Francis Tipton Hunter Eugene Iverd Francis Lee Jaques J.F. Kernan John LaGatta J.C. Leyendecker Coles Phillips Benjamin Prins Ellen Pyle Norman Rockwell Richard Sargent Mead Schaeffer Amos […]
Rockwell’s rural fantasies take flight in a 1935 painting that would later come to define him.
Jack-o’-lanterns, masks, and merriment—in the early 1900s, the ghoulish holiday wasn’t so different than it is today.
Remember clotheslines, black and white television, and only one bathroom? We do!
They’re back! And our archives boast some great referee covers from days gone by.
The actors, the audience … the excitement! We have covers showing all aspects of the theater—including a couple of rarely seen Rockwells.
As long as there has been fire, there have been firefighters. We salute them with classic covers from artists like Rockwell, Dohanos, and Falter.
As we honor those who died on 9/11, we are also reminded how our country came together to stand as one.
Joseph Christian Leyendecker was born in Montabaur, Germany, and immigrated with his family to Chicago, Illinois, at the age of 8. Showing an early interest in painting, he got his first job at the age of 16 in a Chicago engraving house on the strength of some large pictures he had painted on kitchen oilcloth. […]
A bevy of bovine beauties, from the humorous to the picturesque, appeared on our covers. Who knew cows were so popular with illustrators?
From portraits of great leaders, to comical scenes, to the sumptuous and elaborate art he is known for, we love J.C. Leyendecker!
Read about this recognizable model in this Norman Rockwell illustration from the November 16, 1935, Post cover in our September/October 2012 magazine. Click here to order a print from Art.com.