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Norman Rockwell people-watched in the West Wing lobby. Now those sketches are on public display

wtop.comNorman Rockwell people-watched in the West Wing lobby. Now those sketches are on public display - WTOP NewsWASHINGTON (AP) — For more than 40 years, sketches by American illustrator Norman Rockwell of scenes from the White House visitor’s lobby graced the walls of the West Wing, where every president from…✦ Read ad free and get the full MichaelFilter · $5.50
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Norman Rockwell's four 1940s sketches 'So You Want to See the President!' depicting people waiting in the West Wing lobby during WWII are going on public display for the first time. The White House Historical Association paid over $7 million to acquire them after a family ownership dispute led to their auction. Rockwell created the scenes by people-watching from a chair in the lobby, capturing senators, soldiers, journalists, and a Miss America in candid moments of waiting.

Teaching:
• Frame the waiting room as a practice space: what Rockwell did from a chair is what students do on the mat between postures, observing without intervening
• Use the sketches as a class theme on attention as the real artistic instrument, not the pen or the asana
• Cue students to notice the texture of a transition the way Rockwell noticed a kilted officer next to a Secret Service agent: specificity over generality

Writing seeds:
• Essay on people-watching as a yogic discipline: Rockwell in the West Wing as a model of sustained sensory attention
• Short post for the Shala Daily on what a sketch artist and an Ashtanga practitioner share: returning to the same room until you actually see it
• Piece on how Rockwell rebuilt his work after the studio fire by going back to the source, mapped onto rebuilding a practice after injury or life rupture
• Essay on provenance and ownership of practice lineages, using the Early family dispute as a frame for who owns a tradition

Idea map:
• Systems literacy: a lobby is a system of flows, hierarchies, and waiting, and Rockwell's drawings read it the way a teacher reads a Mysore room
• Embodiment: the sketches privilege posture, gesture, and proximity over narrative, the same data a teacher uses to assess a student
• Attention as method: returning twice to the same lobby parallels practicing the same series for years and finding new content each time
• Practice as documentation: the artifact (sketch, asana) is residue of repeated attention, not the point itself

Source: https://wtop.com/lifestyle/2026/06/norman-rockwell-people-watched-in-the-west-wing-lobby-now-those-sketches-are-on-public-display/
Thursday, June 25, 2026 · 6:25 am
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