TURKEY TIME
For my friends on the other side of the Atlantic, today is, of course, Thanksgiving Day and if you'd like to know a bit more about this festival observed by Britain's former colonists, you can read more about its origins on former post.
Not for the first time on this blog, I am reproducing this iconic image of the American family thanksgiving by the great Norman Rockwell...

I love Rockwell's wonderful composition - back-lit from the window and the light bouncing off the white tablecloth - and, in particular, the way in which the senior couple are focused on the placing of the turkey and maintaining the order and ritual of the table.
I also like the way in which the rest of the diners are only partially glimpsed so that the family circle is intimate and tightly knit and it is genius on Rockwell's part that they are are all learning forward in animated conversation with one another - with the one exception of the guy in the bottom right hand corder who is looking directly at the artist and, therefore, the viewer, and so makes us a guest at the table.
It also gives me an excuse to blog a delightful pastiche of Rockwell's painting by a gifted Disney artist and illustrator, Charles Boyer, whom I had the pleasure to meet some years ago...

Like Rockwell's original, Boyer's Disney painting is, of course, kitsch - but it is, surely, down-home-honest-to-goodness kitsch! And - on a day like today - I don't really need any excuse for juxtaposing so the work of two of America's greatest popular artists.
And staying with Disney, here, for your amusement, is that comic triumvirate of Mickey, Donald and Goofy on the trail of the Thanksgiving turkey...
Labels: customs, Disney, Festivals, Mickey Mouse, Norman Rockwell, Thanksgiving






































