*This work, including all text, graphics, and designs, is protected by copyright law. Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or modification of any part of this content without explicit permission from the copyright owner is strictly prohibited.
14X18 The Problem We All Live With Matted Print
- Availability: In stock
- Availability: Awaiting Restock
Become a member
Join today to receive exclusive benefits and increased access to our museum.
*This work, including all text, graphics, and designs, is protected by copyright law. Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or modification of any part of this content without explicit permission from the copyright owner is strictly prohibited.
Details
Double matted offset print of Norman Rockwell's The Problem We All Live With, Look magazine, January 14, 1964 measures 14" inches by 18", interior images measures 9" inches by 14". Fits standard size frame!
The Problem We All Live With was published prominently as a double-page centerfold in Look’s January 14th, 1964 issue – a year that marked the 10th anniversary of the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court ruling declaring racial segregation unconstitutional.
The symbolic work, proposed by Rockwell to Look art director Allen Hurlburt, seems to reflect upon the experiences and sacrifices of four Black children who become the first to attend all-white schools in New Orleans, Ruby Bridges, Gail Etienne, Tessie Prevost, and Leona Tate, who later became known as the New Orleans Four. In keeping with his interest in using local models, Rockwell invited the young Linda Gunn, the child of a friend and neighbor, to pose for his painting.
Today, the title remains one of Rockwell's most enduringly poignant images of American culture.
Find more gifts and prints featuring Norman Rockwell's The Problem We All Live With and shop the collection here.