
William Phillips Counter Signed Artist Proof Limited Edition Print:"Hell Fire Corner"

Artist: William S. Phillips
Title: Hell Fire Corner
Size: 19.5" x 26.5"
Edition: Artist Proof to 100 with COA
Countersigners: British - Air Vice Marshal J. E. Johnson, Group Captain Brian Kingcome, Wing Commander Geoffrey Page, and Wing Commander Bob Stanford-Tuck. German - Lt. Gen. Walter Krupinski, Lt. Gen. Adolf Galland, Lt. Gen. Gunther Rall and Gen. Johannes Steinhoff. American - Col. Francis S. Gabreski. Canadian - Wing Commander Hugh C. Godefroy.
About the Art:Towering clouds, the setting sun and the softness of summer in the England countryside. What could be more peaceful? There was a time, however, when that scene was punctured by the sharp edge of war. It was during the Battle of Britain in the early days of World War II and it is a time the world will never forget.
Although historians have largely concentrated on the serial combat over London, there was an area south of the city that saw more than its share of action. In fact, German and allied pilots met so often over a rocky promontory of land that the area earned the title "Hellfire Corner." - William Phillips
Title: Hell Fire Corner
Size: 19.5" x 26.5"
Edition: Artist Proof to 100 with COA
Countersigners: British - Air Vice Marshal J. E. Johnson, Group Captain Brian Kingcome, Wing Commander Geoffrey Page, and Wing Commander Bob Stanford-Tuck. German - Lt. Gen. Walter Krupinski, Lt. Gen. Adolf Galland, Lt. Gen. Gunther Rall and Gen. Johannes Steinhoff. American - Col. Francis S. Gabreski. Canadian - Wing Commander Hugh C. Godefroy.
About the Art:Towering clouds, the setting sun and the softness of summer in the England countryside. What could be more peaceful? There was a time, however, when that scene was punctured by the sharp edge of war. It was during the Battle of Britain in the early days of World War II and it is a time the world will never forget.
Although historians have largely concentrated on the serial combat over London, there was an area south of the city that saw more than its share of action. In fact, German and allied pilots met so often over a rocky promontory of land that the area earned the title "Hellfire Corner." - William Phillips

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