NORMAN ROCKWELL: IMAGINING FREEDOM

Description

Students will examine how illustrators in the 1940s and beyond became important storytellers who advanced important civic ideas through their creative advertising and images in this exhibition featuring Norman Rockwell and his contemporaries. The exhibition culminates in Rockwell’s depiction of the Four Freedoms as defined in Franklin D. Roosevelt’s 1941 speech of the same name.

The exhibition narrative showcases Rockwell’s war-era artworks that reinforced the positive approach of bringing Americans together for the common good.

Offered At

Denver Art Museum

Since its founding in 1893, the Denver Art Museum (DAM) has amassed more than 70,000 works of art, one of the largest and most comprehensive collections of world art between Chicago and the West Coast. Internationally known for its holdings of American Indian art, the museum has also assembled an extensive group of pre-Columbian and Spanish Colonial art objects now considered one of the finest collections in the world. Other areas of concentration are European and American painting and sculpture, architecture, design and graphics, modern and contemporary, Asian, African, Oceanic, photography, western American and textile art and fashion.

The Denver Art Museum has been a leader in educational programming for more than two decades. The family-friendly approach is fully integrated into the galleries through a unique partnership between curators, designers, and educators for each discipline. A trailblazer in creating innovative opportunities that encourage visitors to interact with the collection, the museum is also known internationally for the way we help our visitors explore art and their own creativity.

Details

Subjects

History, Social Studies, Art, Visual Arts

Capacity

20 students, 1 chap. per 10 stu.

Duration

60 min.

Activity

Field Trip

Grades

6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12

Price Options