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| Print Size: 22.5" X 32" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Print
#2 in the "Band of Brothers" fine art series. |
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June 6, 1944, Normandy,
France… |
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| * screen colors may vary from computer monitor to computer monitor | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| VETERANS
EDITION - SOLD
OUT contact us for secondary market availability Limited edition, each print is hand signed by Easy Company veterans Buck Compton, "Wild Bill" Guarnere, Don Malarkey, and Easy Company’s wartime company commander Dick Winters! |
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Silencing the Guns is
an ultra-realistic painting and fine art print. In 2004, James Dietz, the
artist, traveled to the Brecourt Manor farm in Normandy, France, to study
the battlefield. His resulting artwork captures the hedgerow's cool, dark
shade, set against the warm, summer sun that rose on the morning of D-Day,
60 years ago. Completing Dietz's research, the staff of Valor Studios/Ghost Wings gathered historical details from the last living veterans who had fought as members of Easy Company at Brecourt. Lt. Col. (ret.) Buck Compton, Sgt (ret.) Bill Guarnere, Sgt. (ret.) Don Malarkey, and Maj (ret.) Dick Winters each contributed their personal memories of the mission to silence the guns. Major (ret.) Dick Winters, in particular, critiqued each of the painting's concept sketches ensuring Silencing the Guns' ultra-realism and historical faithfulness. |
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| "Silencing the Guns" is signed by the last living veterans who had fought as members of Easy Company at Brecourt. The signers are: Lt. Col. (ret.) Buck Compton, Sgt (ret.) Bill Guarnere, Sgt. (ret.) Don Malarkey, and Maj (ret.) Dick Winters. Special thanks to these veterans for their donation of time and toil in making this print possible! | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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In the
mid-morning hours of D-Day, June 6, 1944, the deafening sounds of gunfire
resounded across the French hills, along the Channel coast and against low-hanging
clouds. Amidst the fields of the French farm, Brécourt Manor, a particular
cacophony erupted as a German battery of four 105mm cannons shook the soil.
Five miles distant, on Utah Beach, the Brécourt battery’s steel
rained upon American soldiers of the 4th Infantry Division as they disembarked
from their landing craft. Within minutes of that first salvo, an ad hoc squad
of paratroopers from Easy Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th P.I.R., 101st Airborne,
departed the French village of Le Grand-Chemin with a mission to silence those
guns. |
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| Jim
Dietz has gained international recognition in aviation, military and automotive
art circles for his unique approach to these genres. "The people, settings
and costumes are what make early 20th Century history exciting and romantic
to me." It is this feeling that makes Jim Dietz and his artwork so different
from his contemporaries. Rather than simply illustrate hardware, Jim prefers
to portray human involvement, to show in his paintings the interaction between
man and machine-after all, he says, "it is the people who make machines
great-by design, by operation and by dedication."
A native of San Francisco,
Jim graduated from Art Center College of Design in 1969 and began a successful
illustration career in Los Angeles. The subject matter varied from automobiles
to action scenes to romantic book covers. A steady flow of work from New York
clients enabled Jim and his wife to move to Seattle in 1978, where he began
to fulfill his dream of specializing in historical |
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| Artist Jim Dietz with "Silencing The Guns" signer Major Richard Winters. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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aviation, automotive and military art. His clients have included Boeing, Bell Helicopter, Federal Express, Allison, Cessna, Flying Tigers, the Indianapolis 500, BMW, the National Guard and many U.S. Army organizations and associations. Jim lives in Seattle with his wife, Patti, son, lan and his Australian Shepherd, Tazzy, who is seen often in Jim's paintings. His studio resembles a World War I aviator's bar, filled with flying and automotive memorabilia, wooden props and model airplanes. |
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| VValor Studios has the aviation art of John D. Shaw featuring John D. Shaw's Blacksheep Squadron, John D. Shaw's Hornet's Nest print signed by the Doolittle Raiders, John D. Shaw's Band of Brothers print We Were a Band of Brothers, John D. Shaw's By The Dawn's Early Light, John D. Shaw's The Warrior and the Wolfpack, and John D. Shaw's They Fought With What They Had. We also carry the work of Jim Dietz, including his new print "Silencing the Guns", which shows the men of Easy Company, better known as the Band of Brothers. The print is hand signed by Major Dick Winters, leader of Easy Company, along with Buck Compton, Bill Guarnere, and Don Malarkey. Dick Winters was instrumental in this project. Dick Winters also autographed each print. Dick Winters proudly said Silencing the Guns represents his legacy. Dick Winters also signed We Were a Band of Brothers by John D. Shaw. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||