Put this one in the “Even the great ones screw up every once in a while” file. This is a painting from Norman Rockwell titled People Reading Stock Exchange for one of his many Saturday Evening Post covers. There appears to be nothing unique about it at first glance, just a group of folks hunched around a wall chart that they all find completely absorbing. They all seem perfectly normal until you take a closer look and notice that the young man in the red shirt seems different. You look a bit closer, maybe squint a little until you realize you don’t need to do that to see his abnormality. Yes, he has three legs. Rockwell apparently didn’t notice this until it was pointed out years later and it proved to be a embarrassing episode for him, especially given his reputation for capturing detail in his work.
Some people have tried to explain it away as some sort of subconscious phallic representation which seems like a stretch to me. I think it was merely an oversight although an unusual one. As a casual viewer, it it something that is easy to overlook but I am more amazed that in the process that it simply didn’t register for him that he was creating a most unusual young man. As an artist, it’s reassuring to see someone so meticulous make such an error.
Most artists have at least a handful of such things in their background, pieces with shadows that make no sense in nature or arms that are much too long for any living human. Most go unnoticed. The unfortunate thing is that once they are identified, they become the focal point of that painting forever– something once seen cannot be unseen.
I know that I have several paintings with such mistakes, pieces that, without these flaws being pointed out, are strong and full works. Few people, if any, notice these flaws but for me they are the first things my eyes rest upon in the picture. They don’t bother me as I am sure this bothered Rockwell. I see them as symbols of our humanity, our inherent flawed nature.
We don’t need to point out our flaws. They’re there for all to see. We can only hope people accept us, three legs or two or one. And the three-legged young man here is a refreshing reminder of Rockwell’s humanity.
I didn’t see it until you pointed it out – and I even enlarged the picture. What’s funny is that it took years for it to be pointed out to him. Did no one notice, or were they trying to be kind?
It reminds me of one of my favorite Ansel Adams photographs. No, not Half-Dome or the aspens. Adams took a lot of photos of urban Los Angeles, and one that’s archived is a double-exposure from a bowling alley. There are two things about it I love: that Adams could produce a double exposure, and that it remained in the archive.
Some people say “of course he meant to do it”. I’m not so sure. I think it’s his three-legged man, and he kept it around for precisely the reason you cite – as evidence of his humanity.
That’s an interesting shot, far away from the majesty of his Yosemite work. But it definitely is filled with humanity.
I was reminded of this current Verizon commercial. No matter how often I’ve seen it (and, by now, that’s too often), I’m always surprised when “a third leg” turns into another person. I think it’s pretty clever.
If only Rockwell could have had another person pop up!
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