"IN THE FUTURE DAYS, WHICH WE SEEK TO MAKE SECURE, WE LOOK FORWARD TO A WORLD FOUNDED UPON FOUR ESSENTIAL HUMAN FREEDOMS…": EXQUISITE SET OF FOUR INSPIRATIONAL WORLD WAR II POSTERS BY NORMAN ROCKWELL BASED ON ROOSEVELT'S "FOUR FREEDOMS" SPEECH, 1943
(ROCKWELL, Norman). Set of four posters: Four Freedoms. Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1943. Four color broadside posters, each measuring 20 by 28 inches, linen backed and closely framed, measuring 22-1/2 by 30-1/2 inches.
Stunning set of four 1943 World War II posters by iconic American artist Norman Rockwell based on FDR's "Four Freedoms" speech, depicting the four freedoms—Freedom of Speech, Freedom of Worship, Freedom from Want, and Freedom from Fear.
"In his January 1941 address to Congress, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt articulated his vision for a postwar world founded on four basic human freedoms: freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear. In the spring of 1942, Norman Rockwell was working on a piece commissioned by the Ordnance Department of the U.S. Army… But Rockwell wanted to do more for the war effort and decided he would illustrate Roosevelt's four freedoms" (Norman Rockwell Museum). However, Rockwell struggled to find a perspective powerful enough to reach all Americans. Then, he went to a town hall meeting and witnessed a single man, surrounded by his neighbors, rise in dissent. As he so often had, Rockwell decided to reach America by using his own experiences, by depicting the everyday affairs of small-town American life. Unfortunately, the Ordnance Department was out of money, though Rockwell's drafts were unquestionably impressive. Rockwell turned to the Saturday Evening Post, which gave him permission to cease his work on covers once a month in order to provide the paintings for the Post's publication. "The paintings were a phenomenal success… In May 1943, representatives from the Post and the U.S. Department of the Treasury announced a joint campaign to sell war bonds and stamps. They would send the Four Freedoms paintings along with 1,000 original cartoons and paintings by other illustrators and original manuscripts from The Saturday Evening Post on a national tour. Traveling to 16 cities, the exhibition was visited by more than a million people who purchased 133 million dollars in war bonds and stamps" (Norman Rockwell Museum). These particular posters do not include bond solicitations. OWI Nos. 43-46. See American Style, 132; Design for Victory, 37; IWM II:52; Judd 7.1; Nelson, 48; Pollack, 92-93; Posters for Victory, 40ff; War Posters 210.
Early folding creases as usual, light wear and occasional minor splitting to folds, marginal wear mainly affecting Freedom from Fear. A lovely and attractive set.