STOCKBRIDGE, MASS.- Norman Rockwell Museum announces the debut of a new exhibition series, A Brief History of Illustration. The first rotation, titled The Abyss, is on view now through May 31, 2026. The Museum will present roughly two rotations each year, drawn exclusively from the permanent collection.
Designed to highlight both the rich history of illustration and the extraordinary depth of the Museums holdingsnow numbering approximately 25,000 works of artthe Brief History of Illustration series will trace a single theme across time in each iteration. Each presentation will occupy one of the Museums galleries, offering visitors fresh encounters with rarely seen works and new perspectives on familiar images, while also providing an important context for the work of Norman Rockwell, America's greatest illustrator.
The Abyss explores a subject as visually compelling as it is symbolically complex: the ocean. From the 19th century to the present, illustrators have returned repeatedly to the sea as a site of beauty, mystery, danger, humor, and political meaning. The works gathered here reveal how images of the ocean have served many purposesshaping wartime propaganda, anchoring political satire, conjuring fictional underwater worlds, and illustrating stories ranging from fairy tales to historical fiction.
The word abyss has always described something unfathomable, said Russell Lord, the Museums Chief of Curatorial Affairs, But illustration attempts to illuminate that darkness. This exhibition brings together artists who used images of the sea to explain, question, warn, entertain, and imagine, revealing how illustration has helped audiences navigate both the known world and the imagined one.
Spanning centuries and styles, The Abyss features work by some of the most influential illustrators in American and international visual culture, including Teresa Fasolino, Anton Otto Fischer, Joan Hall, Thea Kliros, Tom Lovell, Roy McKie, Stanley Meltzoff, Wendell Minor, Thomas Nast, Patrick Oliphant, Howard Pyle, and Norman Rockwell, alongside anonymous works and objects from the Museums archives.
Several artists in the exhibition envision fictional or speculative underwater worlds. Tom Lovells dramatic deep-sea scenes and Stanley Meltzoffs fantastical Undersea Lab imagine the ocean as a realm of adventure, danger, and futuristic possibility. By contrast, other works respond directly to real historical events. Julian Allens haunting sketch of the sinking of the Titanic distills catastrophe into a few devastating lines, while Thomas Nasts 1874 political cartoon, A Hard Fish to Catch, uses maritime metaphor to critique 19th-century American diplomacy. Patrick Oliphants Nixon at the Helm of a Sunken Ship extends this tradition into the 20th century, transforming the ocean into a stage for political reckoning.
Throughout the exhibition, the sea appears alternately serene and violent, whimsical and ominous. Roy McKies playful illustrationsbest known for their association with Dr. Seusssit alongside the brooding romanticism of Thomas Fogartys storm-tossed vessel and the psychological intensity of Howard Pyles moonlit lake scene. Book illustrations, such as Thea Kliros Little Mermaid and Deb Koffman's The Magic Lamp, demonstrate how even minimal gestures can suggest vast emotional and imaginative depths, while Norman Rockwells The Stay at Homes (Outward Bound) offers a poignant meditation on generations bound together by the lure of the sea.
Together, these works reveal not only the oceans symbolic power, but also the evolving role of illustration itselffrom quickly executed sketches and journal covers to finely crafted paintings and iconic printed images. In doing so, The Abyss gestures toward a third, more metaphorical abyss: the Museums own ever-expanding collection. The exhibition offers a glimpse into those depths, underscoring the Museums ongoing commitment to bringing new light to the history of illustration and the artists who shaped public imagination.
Norman Rockwell Museum's holdings include 865 original artworks by Rockwell, 25,000 original illustrations by almost 400 artists, and an archive of over 400,000 photographs, letters, and published materials. An actively acquiring institution, the Museums collections continue to grow through the generosity of artists and collectors. These new Brief History rotations offer an opportunity to highlight materials in the collection that have been rarely or never-before seen, as well as recent acquisitions demonstrating the Museums ongoing effort to trace a comprehensive history of the field of illustration. Unique in its mission, the Museum ensures the preservation, study, and interpretation of published imagerythe peoples art―which reflects and shapes perception and opinion across mass media. It also celebrates and shares the legacies of the many gifted creators who, working across time, history, and artistic styles, have shaped Americas visual culture in myriad ways.
A Brief History of Illustration: The Abyss is on view at the Norman Rockwell Museum through May 31, 2026.