Robert Taylor Signed

Richard Taylor THREATENING SKIES 3 PilotSig MINT B-29 Superfortress Aviation Art


Richard Taylor THREATENING SKIES 3 PilotSig MINT B-29 Superfortress Aviation Art
Richard Taylor THREATENING SKIES 3 PilotSig MINT B-29 Superfortress Aviation Art
Richard Taylor THREATENING SKIES 3 PilotSig MINT B-29 Superfortress Aviation Art
Richard Taylor THREATENING SKIES 3 PilotSig MINT B-29 Superfortress Aviation Art
Richard Taylor THREATENING SKIES 3 PilotSig MINT B-29 Superfortress Aviation Art

Richard Taylor THREATENING SKIES 3 PilotSig MINT B-29 Superfortress Aviation Art    Richard Taylor THREATENING SKIES 3 PilotSig MINT B-29 Superfortress Aviation Art
Over 1500 reviews - no worries! Check my auctions for more Robert Taylor, John Shaw, John Young, James Dietz, Nicolas Trudgian, William S. Phillips, Keith Ferris, Jack Fellows, Harley Copic, Roy Grinnell, Frank Wootton and other aviation art prints. Also, signed & unsigned books, signed WW2 Ace biography sheets from the American Fighter Aces Association, and 1/48 scale kits from companies such as Tamiya, Hasegawa, Eduard, Revell, Monogram, etc. Richard Taylor THREATENING SKIES 3 Pilot Signed B-29 Superfortress Aviation Art Print.

SIZE: 23.5 by 30.5 inches. SIGNATURES: Hand-signed and numbered in pencil by the artist Richard Taylor (Robert Taylor's son) and 3 B-29 pilots who flew missions over Japan.

Comes with the Certificate of Authenticity. It's pretty rare to see Japanese aircraft featured in aviation art.

If you do, it's almost always the Mitsubishi Zero. I like this print because it features the Najakima Ki-44 Shoki (Demon), code-named "Tojo" by the Allies. A unique aircraft set against a brilliant sunset. This image is very eye-catching. As the USAAF's mighty B-29 Superfortresses relentlessly pounded the Imperial Japanese war machine, few Japanese fighter interceptors could match these high-flying super bombers.

The heavily armed Superfortresses, the largest and fastest piston-engined bomber in World War II, were slowly grinding Japan's industrial cities and factories to dust. Increasingly desperate to counter the threat, the Japanese Air Force turned vainly for salvation to the Nakajima Ki-44 Shoki. Codenamed Tojo by the Allies, the high performance interceptor was designed for speed and high altitude, could climb quickly to 37,000ft, and was one of the very few Japanese aircraft that could challenge the fearsome Superfortresses. Richard Taylor's painting recreates an encounter on 19 February 1945. As dawn breaks over the Pacific, a determined force of Japanese Ki-44's launch a surprise attack on a large formation of USAAF B-29 Superfortresses as they approach the Japanese mainland. B-29 gunners let rip as one fighter flashes past, with a second fighter closing at high speed.

Chunks of the B-29's port wing and aileron have been taken out in the initial attack, and with another Japanese fighter fast on its tail, the outcome of this particular encounter hangs in the balance. A total of ten Superfortresses fell victim that day. Never framed, stored flat in a non-smoking, climate-controlled environment. Check my feedback - it's excellent.

I ask for the same consideration from you. I will pack your print very carefully so it arrives undamaged.


Richard Taylor THREATENING SKIES 3 PilotSig MINT B-29 Superfortress Aviation Art    Richard Taylor THREATENING SKIES 3 PilotSig MINT B-29 Superfortress Aviation Art