Advanced Search

Use the advanced searches below to find what you are looking for.  To select multiple signatures just hold down the Ctrl key on your keyboard and select the signatures by clicking on them.  Then click the Search button.

Search Text
Search in Artist
Search in Media
Search in Subject
Search in Theme
Search in Signatures

Display

With its sleek, graceful design, instantly recognisable by its thin, aerodynamically advanced elliptical wings, the Supermarine Spitfire was the creation of R. J. Mitchell, an aeronautical creative genius. His fighter was to become not only the most important Allied aircraft of World War II, but the most famous British fighter in history. As dawn breaks a pair of Spitfire Mk1s fly...

View product >

THE SECOND IN A SERIES COMMEMORATING THE GREAT WAR 1914 – 1918 On Friday 15 September 1916, during the Battle of the Somme, a new, unnerving sound was heard on the Western Front; a deep mechanical rumble accompanied by the ominous clanking of metal. Approaching their trench positions on the front line between the villages of Flers and Courcelette, German soldiers could see...

View product >

All the great Luftwaffe Aces flew the Me109.  Most achieved their phenomenal aerial successes in this supreme little fighter, and it is this beautiful aircraft that Robert Taylor has chosen for this painting to pay respect to this unique band of air Aces.  In the foreground the Staffel Commander is viewed leading the attack, his cannons blazing as he closes on a formation of...

View product >

The Allies believed Pointe du Hoc to be the most dangerous battery on the Normandy coast. If the D-Day landings were to succeed, the guns that threatened the American beaches had to be destroyed. Sited on a high rocky headland jutting out into the sea four miles to the west of  Omaha  beach, Pointe du Hoc would be a tough nut to crack. Despite...

View product >

The bands played, the streamers flew and the crowds cheered; their loud ‘hurrahs’ filling the air as the world’s largest liner slipped gently away from the White Star berth at Southampton. The fateful maiden voyage to New York had begun. It was a bitterly cold, crystal clear night and the sea was flat and calm. In the crow’s nest of RMS Titanic, four days out from Southampton, two...

View product >

The Allies believed Pointe du Hoc to be the most dangerous battery on the Normandy coast. If the D-Day landings were to succeed, the guns that threatened the American beaches had to be destroyed. Sited on a high rocky headland jutting out into the sea four miles to the west of...

View product >

Piling out of their C-47 Dakotas, US Paratroopers descend into the Drop Zone inland from Utah Beach, D-Day, 6th June, 1944. One of the companion prints issued with D-DAY THE AIRBORNE ASSAULT.

View product >

P-47 Thunderbolts of the 56th Fighter Group – The Wolfpack – release their drop tanks as they prepare to engage enemy fighters low over the Rhine, November 1944.  The Wolfpack had more Aces and destroyed more enemy aircraft in air combat than any other...

View product >

THE WORLD’S PREMIER AVIATION ARTIST PAYS TRIBUTE TO THE F-4 PHANTOMS OF THE ISRAELI AIR FORCE RECOUNTING AN ACTION DURING THE LARGEST JET-TO-JET BATTLE IN HISTORY - THE YOM KIPPUR WAR Yom Kippur – the Day of Atonement – is the holiest day in the Hebrew calendar and in Israel is marked by a national holiday but on that day in 1973 the...

View product >

THE WORLD’S PREMIER AVIATION ARTIST PAYS TRIBUTE TO THE F-4 PHANTOMS OF THE ISRAELI AIR FORCE RECOUNTING AN ACTION DURING THE LARGEST JET-TO-JET BATTLE IN HISTORY - THE YOM KIPPUR WAR Yom Kippur – the Day of Atonement – is the holiest day in the Hebrew calendar and in Israel is marked by a national...

View product >