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	<title>Comments on: Happy Birthday Norman Rockwell</title>
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	<link>http://www.blabla.co.za/happy-birthday-norman-rockwell/</link>
	<description>The World We Live In &#38; Life In General</description>
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		<title>By: Voted!</title>
		<link>http://www.blabla.co.za/happy-birthday-norman-rockwell/#comment-2976</link>
		<dc:creator>Voted!</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Feb 2010 08:42:51 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Was there not a sign above those prints for a long time that read, &quot;NO Politics, No Religion&quot; Allowed, I am sure it was taken down that night of the Johnny Clegg concert? </description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Was there not a sign above those prints for a long time that read, &quot;NO Politics, No Religion&quot; Allowed, I am sure it was taken down that night of the Johnny Clegg concert?</p>
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		<title>By: TheOnlyCin</title>
		<link>http://www.blabla.co.za/happy-birthday-norman-rockwell/#comment-2973</link>
		<dc:creator>TheOnlyCin</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Feb 2010 08:10:50 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>A fascinating artist, despite his sentimental subject matter.  I think we have all been transported to another world at some time in our lives by one of his pictures.  There is a lot of interesting movie trivia about his paintings (got this on Wiki this morning): 
 
In the film Empire of the Sun, a young boy (played by Christian Bale), is put to bed by his loving parents in a scene also inspired by a Rockwell painting&#8212;a reproduction of which is later kept by the young boy during his captivity in a prison camp. (Freedom from Fear, 1943).[13]  
The 1994 film Forrest Gump includes a shot in a school that re-creates Rockwell&#039;s &quot;Girl with Black Eye&quot; with young Forrest in place of the girl. Much of the film drew heavy visual inspiration from Rockwell&#039;s art.[14]  
In the film Lilo &amp; Stitch, the end credits include a parody of Rockwell&#039;s Thanksgiving illustration. The participants in the dinner include three aliens, a native Hawaiian woman and child, and an African-American man. (Freedom from Want, 1943).  
The 1988 film Funny Farm featured a scheme concocted by a homeowner (played by Chevy Chase) where redneck townsfolk are bribed to act like the characters of Norman Rockwell&#039;s paintings to create the illusion of ideal small-town American life, making the area more appealing to prospective buyers.  
In the film The Polar Express, there appears one of the Rockwells&#039; Saturday Evening Post covers, The Discovery (Boy Discovering Santa Suit).  
Film director George Lucas owns Rockwell&#039;s original of The Peach Crop, and his colleague Steven Spielberg owns a sketch of Rockwell&#039;s Triple Self-Portrait. Each of the artworks hangs in the respective filmmakers&#039; workspaces.[8] Rockwell is a major character in an episode of Lucas&#8217; Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, &#8220;Passion for Life.&#8221;  
In 2005, there was great controversy when Target Co. sold Marshall Field&#039;s to Federated Department Stores and the Federated discovered a reproduction of Rockwell&#039;s The Clock Mender, which depicted the great clocks of the Marshall Field and Company Building on display.[15][16] Rockwell had donated the painting depicted on the cover of the November 3, 1945 Saturday Evening Post to the store in 1948.[17]  
A Thanksgiving dinner scene in director Ridley Scott&#039;s 2007 film American Gangster emulates Rockwell&#039;s classic painting &quot;Freedom from Want&quot;.  
Stand-up comedian Christopher Titus performed a one-man show early in his career entitled &quot;Norman Rockwell is Bleeding,&quot; which revolved around the comedian&#039;s dysfunctional childhood and family. He chose the title based on his experiences being at odds with the idealized images of Rockwell&#039;s works.  
Writer Dean Koontz describes a scene of a boy and his dog sitting side by side surfing the internet as a Norman Rockwell moment of the twenty-first century in his novel Relentless.  
 
 
(sorry about the long comment, thought your readers may enjoy it). </description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A fascinating artist, despite his sentimental subject matter.  I think we have all been transported to another world at some time in our lives by one of his pictures.  There is a lot of interesting movie trivia about his paintings (got this on Wiki this morning):</p>
<p>In the film Empire of the Sun, a young boy (played by Christian Bale), is put to bed by his loving parents in a scene also inspired by a Rockwell painting&mdash;a reproduction of which is later kept by the young boy during his captivity in a prison camp. (Freedom from Fear, 1943).[13] </p>
<p>The 1994 film Forrest Gump includes a shot in a school that re-creates Rockwell&#039;s &quot;Girl with Black Eye&quot; with young Forrest in place of the girl. Much of the film drew heavy visual inspiration from Rockwell&#039;s art.[14] </p>
<p>In the film Lilo &amp; Stitch, the end credits include a parody of Rockwell&#039;s Thanksgiving illustration. The participants in the dinner include three aliens, a native Hawaiian woman and child, and an African-American man. (Freedom from Want, 1943). </p>
<p>The 1988 film Funny Farm featured a scheme concocted by a homeowner (played by Chevy Chase) where redneck townsfolk are bribed to act like the characters of Norman Rockwell&#039;s paintings to create the illusion of ideal small-town American life, making the area more appealing to prospective buyers. </p>
<p>In the film The Polar Express, there appears one of the Rockwells&#039; Saturday Evening Post covers, The Discovery (Boy Discovering Santa Suit). </p>
<p>Film director George Lucas owns Rockwell&#039;s original of The Peach Crop, and his colleague Steven Spielberg owns a sketch of Rockwell&#039;s Triple Self-Portrait. Each of the artworks hangs in the respective filmmakers&#039; workspaces.[8] Rockwell is a major character in an episode of Lucas&rsquo; Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, &ldquo;Passion for Life.&rdquo; </p>
<p>In 2005, there was great controversy when Target Co. sold Marshall Field&#039;s to Federated Department Stores and the Federated discovered a reproduction of Rockwell&#039;s The Clock Mender, which depicted the great clocks of the Marshall Field and Company Building on display.[15][16] Rockwell had donated the painting depicted on the cover of the November 3, 1945 Saturday Evening Post to the store in 1948.[17] </p>
<p>A Thanksgiving dinner scene in director Ridley Scott&#039;s 2007 film American Gangster emulates Rockwell&#039;s classic painting &quot;Freedom from Want&quot;. </p>
<p>Stand-up comedian Christopher Titus performed a one-man show early in his career entitled &quot;Norman Rockwell is Bleeding,&quot; which revolved around the comedian&#039;s dysfunctional childhood and family. He chose the title based on his experiences being at odds with the idealized images of Rockwell&#039;s works. </p>
<p>Writer Dean Koontz describes a scene of a boy and his dog sitting side by side surfing the internet as a Norman Rockwell moment of the twenty-first century in his novel Relentless. </p>
<p>(sorry about the long comment, thought your readers may enjoy it).</p>
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