Posted on 05/23/2014 5:13:41 PM PDT by windcliff
Rockwells greatest sin as an artist is simple: His is an art of unending cliché.
In that Washington Post criticism of a 2010 exhibition of Norman Rockwell paintings at the Smithsonian, Blake Gopnik joined a long line of prominent critics attacking Rockwell, the American artist and illustrator who depicted life in mid-20th-century America and died in 1978.
Norman Rockwell was demonized by a generation of critics who not only saw him as an enemy of modern art, but of all art, said Deborah Solomon, whose biography of Rockwell, American Mirror, was published last year. He was seen as a lowly calendar artist whose work was unrelated to the lofty ambitions of art, she said, or, as she put it in her book, a cornball and a square. The critical dismissal was obviously a source of great pain throughout his life, Ms. Solomon added.
But Rockwell is now undergoing a major critical and financial reappraisal. This week, the major auction houses built their spring sales of American art around two Rockwell paintings: After the Prom, at Sothebys, and The Rookie, at Christies. After the Prom sold for $9.1 million on Wednesday; The Rookie for $22.5 million on Thursday.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
/bingo
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