Images
Norman Rockwell, Freedom of Speech, The Saturday Evening Post 1943, 1943
Objectives
Students will understand that:
- Norman Rockwell made conscious artistic choices about how best to reach the audience he wished to serve when he created his “Four Freedoms” paintings.
- Franklin D. Roosevelt’s 1941 State of the Union address was Rockwell’s inspiration for the paintings.
- the paintings served other purposes beyond illustrating Roosevelt’s four freedoms.
Focusing Statement
When Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered his “Four Freedoms” State of the Union address in January of 1941, just shy of a year prior to America’s entry into World War II, he could never have guessed the impact it would make on the artist Norman Rockwell and how the inspiration the artist gained from that speech would display itself and ripple out across the nation to touch the hearts of so many Americans. In this lesson students will examine closely “Freedom of Speech”; they will read excerpts from the “Four Freedoms” address and describe how a sampling of posters and ads created during WWII connect to it. Students will also ponder what made these paintings so incredibly popular and well-loved during that time.
Examining Expressive Content
Show students Rockwell’s “Freedom of Speech” image but don’t show them the title. Ask:
- What do you see? Tell me about this image.
- What does your eye focus on first? Why?
- Describe the speaker’s facial expression.
- How is he dressed in comparison to the other men around him? What might you then surmise?
- One senses that the speaker is saying something important and is being regarded with respect. What did Rockwell do to make us think that?
- Describe the mood of the gathering. How did Rockwell accomplish that?
- Look carefully for a clue to the purpose of the gathering.
- Describe what you think is going on in this scene.
- The title of this painting is “Freedom of Speech”. Norman Rockwell painted it in 1943. What was going on in the world then?
Read aloud the following excerpts from Bruce Heydt’s online article, “Norman Rockwell and the Four Freedoms”:
The good people of Arlington, Vermont, did not have the war on their minds when they gathered for a town meeting one evening during the dog days of the summer of 1942. On the contrary, in contrast to the typically grim reports coming from the Pacific and European theaters early in the year, it was good news that drew Arlington townsfolk to their meeting: town councilors had announced plans to build a new school. Only one resident, Jim Edgerton, objected to the proposed building, and in the course of the evening’s proceedings, he rose to speak.
No one at that town meeting agreed with Edgerton, but all of them honored his right to state his case, and all of them listened respectfully. Here was the first freedom, the freedom of speech, expressed in a simple, familiar American scene—the sort Rockwell excelled at depicting.”