The painting has been generally well received. In the catalog for the 1972 retrospective exhibition of Rockwell's works, museum director
Thomas Buechner described the painting, along with
Breaking Home Ties (1954), as the artist's two best works. Art critic
Deborah Solomon found the painting to be a "peak of [Rockwell's] talents as a realist painter", and novelist
John Updike praised the painting's small and "unnecessary" details.
Popular culture historian Christopher Finch considered
Marriage License to be iconic, one of Rockwell's "most successful canvases", and belonging "with the very finest examples of Rockwell's art". Writing in 1955 for
The Washington Post, critic Leslie Judd Portner described the painting as boring and "pedestrian" in her scathing review of the Rockwell exhibition at the Corcoran Gallery of Art.
Philosopher of art Marcia Muelder Eaton uses
Marriage License and Vermeer's
The Milkmaid as
foils in
Art and Nonart: Reflections on an Orange Crate and a Moose Call to explore the boundaries of "aesthetic value" by testing a series of assertions about what makes "good art". She tries to test the idea that only one of the two paintings draws from earlier works of art, but fails. Much like Deborah Solomon and Dave Ferman of the
Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Eaton notes that
Marriage License is influenced by
Dutch old masters, based on its use of light and dark interiors. When analyzing the technical skill needed to produce the works, she finds that both artists have a high degree of craftsmanship. Where Eaton finds the paintings differ is on the subject matter and presentation. She describes Rockwell's work as "cheaply achieved" and "childish" due to the shallow symbolism and compares it to a mass-market cartoon. Eaton later writes that she has "very little, if any, drive to hear what others have to say about it [
Marriage License]" due to the lack of interpretation a viewer performs.
Legacy As a well-known Rockwell painting,
Marriage License has been used as inspiration for other works. There were plans for a Christmas-themed film based on the painting and several other Rockwells in 1979. The production company filmed exterior shots, but production stopped in January because Stockbridge's
Board of Selectmen was not properly notified of the project. Despite several attempts the producers could not receive permission to film largely because the Selectmen wanted the best possible deal for the town. As a response to
Goodridge v. Department of Public Health, the first
state supreme court decision in favor of
same-sex marriage, in 2004, artist Richard Williams created a parody of
Marriage License for
Mad Magazine titled
If Norman Rockwell Depicted the 21st Century. The parody stays close to the source material but with the cast iron stove replaced by a photocopier, the
spittoon becoming a trash can, and a pair of gay men signing their marriage license. The woman's yellow dress in the original is paralleled by the shirt of the man closer to the viewer. Psychologists Earl Ginter, Gargi Roysircar and Lawrence Gerstein saw it instead as a commentary on the role of government in deciding which marriages are valid and which ones are not. The parody was re-posted in 2012 on
Mad website in celebration of the
Second Circuit striking down the
Defense of Marriage Act in
United States v. Windsor. ==References==