Overall size: 29 1/4" x 23 1/4"
Image size: 22 3/4" x 15 3/4"
S/N by Artist
150 Limited Editions....$325
175 Collector's Editions....$415
25 Collector's Artist's Proofs....$550
Signatures:
Limited Edition - 3 signatures
Each print in every edition is individually numbered and personally signed by the artist, together with three prominent pilots who flew the P-51 in Europe during WWII:
Collectors Edition & Remarques - 8 signatures:
Each print in these editions has been additionally signed by a further five P-51 pilots, all of them veterans of the war in Europe:
Plane Type: North American P-51 Mustang
When Hitler invaded Poland the British found themselves at war – and isolated. Desperate for new fighters and with production at full capacity they turned to the US aircraft manufacturer North American Aviation who were convinced they had the answer for Britain’s needs and within the space of just four months the company had their new machine in the air! The Mustang was a triumph – testament to its designer Edgar Schmued, and the people who built it.
It was fast, manoeuvrable, hard-hitting and, by the time it was combined with Rolls-Royces’ legendary Merlin engine, was capable of outperforming anything the enemy could throw at it. When P-51s first appeared in the skies over Berlin, Hermann Goering was reported to have announced that he knew then the war was lost.
A special new breed of men flew the Mustang as the Allies pushed for victory in Europe. Tough, supremely confident, determined, and gloriously brave; it was an era that belonged to them and the P-51 helped produce some of the greatest Aces of WWII. Such iconic pilots as George Preddy, John Meyer, Don Blakeslee, Kit Carson and Bud Anderson scored all or most of their victories in this thoroughbred fighter.
To honor the heroic pilots who flew and fought in this iconic machine, Robert Taylor has chosen this classic portrait, completed with all of his usual mastery of his craft, in tribute to all USAAF units that flew the Mustang.
Set against a dramatic bank of clouds, Looking for Trouble bears all the hallmarks of a timeless Taylor masterpiece. P-51Ds of the 352nd Fighter Group with full long-range tanks slung under their wings, head out from their forward base in Belgium on an extended sweep east of the Rhine crossing on the lookout for enemy aircraft, in the spring of 1945.