Artists Taylor Clinton and Julie Kluh have created a mural inspired by Rosie the Riveter to offer a message of hope during the COVID-19 crisis. It is this version, commissioned by the U.S. War Production Coordinating Committee and created by artist J. Howard Miller, that has become the iconic image associated with the phrase "Rosie the Riveter." Rockwell's illustration features a brawny woman taking her lunch break with a rivet gun on Our rosie the riveter canvas art is stretched on 1.5 inch thick stretcher bars and may be customized with your choice of black, white, or mirrored sides. Norman Rockwell's Rosie the Riveter received mass distribution on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post on Memorial Day, May 29, 1943. Rosie The Riveter - 1943 Saturday Evening Post cover May 29, 1943. Rosie The Riveter Artist Norman Rockwell Year 1943 Medium Oil on canvas Dimensions 52 x 40 in 132 x 102 cm Norman Rockwell Famous Artwork Freedom of Speech, 1943 Freedom from Want, 1943 Freedom of Worship, 1943 Freedom from Fear, 1943 The Problem We All Live With, 1964 Breaking Home Ties, 1954 Russian Schoolroom, 1967 Rosie the Riveter was part of this propaganda campaign and became the symbol of women in the workforce during World War II. Buy rosie the riveter canvas prints designed by millions of independent artists from all over the world. in a speech balloon above her trim figure. The first image now considered to be Rosie the Riveter was created by the American artist J. Howard Miller in 1942, but it was titled “ We Can Do It!” and had no