
"Freedom from Fear" WWII OWI #46 Home Front Poster (Medium Format) by Norman Rockwell (1943)
OWI No. 46. Part of a series that Norman Rockwell created for the Office of War Information, featuring the four freedoms that Americans were fighting to preserve during WWII. Features a Norman Rockwell painting of parents tucking their son into bed while the father holds newspaper with frightening headlines, originally printed in the Saturday Evening Post. Note that this series of posters, commonly referred to as "The Four Freedoms", were printed in three sizes: 20" x 28", 28" x 40", and 40" x 56", and each was printed and distributed by the Office of War Information in 1943. (Note that with linen backing, posters can become stretched and so may not conform to these sizes exactly). In 1941, FDR declared four freedoms for all humans: Freedom of Speech, Freedom from Fear, Freedom of Worship, and Freedom from Want. Inspired by this speech, Norman Rockwell struggled to illustrate these concepts until he attended a town hall meeting and realized that everyday middle American life would make