Norman Rockwell art that ignited a lawsuit and a love story is now on public view

Norman Rockwell art that ignited a lawsuit and a love story is now on public view

Norman Rockwell’s 1943 series So You Want to See the President! Click to enlarge.

Bruce M. White/The White House Historical Association


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Bruce M. White/The White House Historical Association

Norman Rockwell's 1943 series So You Want to See the President! Click to enlarge.

Norman Rockwell’s 1943 series So You Want to See the President! Click to enlarge.

Bruce M. White/The White House Historical Association

Norman Rockwell’s So You Want to See The President! appeared in The Saturday Evening Post magazine in November 1943, at the height of World War II.

In the foreground are a string of people waiting to see President Franklin Delano Roosevelt as well as the Secret Service officers watching over them. White House reporters, Miss America, a bored cameraman, a Scottish soldier, military officials and others sit on red sofas and chairs. As for FDR, he appears in a small sketch at the end of the illustration in the lower right hand corner. And that was the point. It was FDR’s longtime press secretary Stephen Early who commissioned Rockwell to create the piece.

“Early wanted to show President Roosevelt as accessible, as being engaged with the American people at a time when you could only know what was going on in the White House by reading the newspaper or listening on the radio,” said Stewart McLaurin, president of the White House Historical Association.

To create the work, Norman Rockwell sat in the West Wing with the visitors, sketching who and what he saw, including gas masks hanging from a coat rack, a reminder that the world was at war. It’s labeled ‘President’s gas mask.’

“So they were ready for any contingency at that time,” said McLaurin.

Sketches, photographs lost in a fire

Norman Rockwell was known for using meticulous detail to draw out a range of human emotions in his vignettes of everyday life. His process included both sketching and photographing his subjects before creating full-sized works. You can see much of the raw material he used for So You Want To See The President! on the Norman Rockwell Museum’s website.

After his first visit to the West Wing, he took his sketches back to his studio in Vermont. But in May of 1943, a terrible fire burned his studio to the ground. McLaurin said his work on So You Want To See The President! was completely lost, “So he very timidly wrote back to the White House and said, ‘Might I come back and do it again?'” The White House said yes and back he went.

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