US war bonds poster with Rockwell painting of Thanksgiving dinner to promote freedom from want

http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/units/us-005578-irn520942-irn520947 an entity of type: Record

The poster was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1988 by David and Zelda Silberman. 
Norman Rockwell (1894-1978) was born in New York City, New York. He studied art at The New York School of Art, The National Academy of Design and The Art Students League. While still a teenager, he was hired as art director of Boys’ Life, the official publication of the Boy Scouts of America, and began a freelance career illustrating a variety of young people’s publications. Throughout his career Rockwell created covers for The Saturday Evening Post. In 1930, he married Mary Barstow, a schoolteacher, and they had three sons. In 1939, Rockwell and his family moved to Arlington, Vermont. In 1943, he painted the Four Freedoms, a series of four paintings based on a speech by President Franklin Roosevelt. The paintings toured the United States in a traveling exhibition and through the sale of war bonds, raised over $130 million for the war effort. The United States Office of War Information (OWI) was created on June 13, 1942, to centralize and control the content and production of government information and propaganda about the war. It coordinated the release of war news for domestic use, and using posters along with radio broadcasts, worked to promote patriotism, warn about foreign spies, and recruit women into war work. The office also established an overseas branch, which launched a large-scale information and propaganda campaign abroad. The government appealed to the public through popular culture and more than a quarter of a billion dollars' worth of advertising was donated during the first three years of the National Defense Savings Program. Victory in Europe was declared on May 8, 1945, and in Japan on September 2, 1945. The OWI ceased operation in September. 
irn520947 
US war bonds poster with Rockwell painting of Thanksgiving dinner to promote freedom from want 
overall: Height: 27.875 inches (70.803 cm) | Width: 20.000 inches (50.8 cm) 
Four Freedoms war bonds poster featuring a Norman Rockwell painting of a traditional New England Thanksgiving dinner as a symbol of the Freedom from Want for which we were fighting the war. It is one of a series of four posters (1988.42.1, 2,3) using Rockwell's paintings, inspired by the Four Freedoms described in Roosevelt's 1941 State of the Union Address: freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear. The US entered the war in December 1941, following the attack on Pearl Harbor. The Office of War Information (OWI) was set up in June 1942 to control the message and imagery of government information about the war. Rockwell created sketches about the Four Freedoms to help the war effort, but no one in Washington was interested. The paintings were published by the Saturday Evening Post beginning February 26, 1943 and then reprinted, with permission, by the OWI. The OWI launched a nationwide tour with the paintings, raising $130 million dollars in war bond sales. They also offered the posters for sale in three different sizes and four million sets of the posters were printed. 
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Color offset lithographic poster reproducing a painting of an older woman in a white apron and blue dress placing a platter with a large, cooked turkey in the center of a set table. A man in a black suit stands close behind her and 9 members of her extended family lean in toward the table with smiling, flushed faces, except for 1 man in the bottom right corner who looks out toward the viewer. The painting is unified by the bright white of the back window curtains, wainscoting, and the large, white cloth and dishes on the table. The artists's name, Norman Rockwell, is printed within the image. The poster has blurred sections due to a printing misalignment. 

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