Fairfax Raid, The - limited edition print
Fairfax Raid, The - limited edition print
John S. Mosby, March 9, 1863
Regular price
$400.00 USD
Regular price
Sale price
$400.00 USD
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per
Custom framing is available for this print. Please call 800-850-1776 or email info@mortkunstler.com for more information.
LIMITED EDITION PRINTS
Paper Prints
Reproduction technique: Fine offset lithography on neutral pH archival quality paper using the finest fade-resistant inks.
Each print is numbered and signed by the artist and accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity.
Image Size: 18” x 27½” • Overall Size: 23” x 32½”
Signed & Numbered • Edition Size: 2,750
Signed Artist’s Proof • Edition Size: 100
Patron’s Edition, Signed & Numbered • Edition Size: 250
Mort Künstler’s Comments
As long as I have painted scenes from the Civil War, I have been asked when I would depict John Singleton Mosby, the “Gray Ghost” of the Confederacy. Finally I've done it. And the event I chose to paint is the action that made Mosby famous: the 1863 Fairfax Raid.
I especially enjoy painting a historical subject that includes an existing object, so people can go to the site and compare the historical image with the contemporary scene. The historic Fairfax County Courthouse still exists in Fairfax, Virginia today, and is a picturesque centerpiece to this painting of Mosby's most daring exploit. Historian Brian Conley of the Fairfax County Public Library obtained period photographs of the old court house which enabled me to faithfully depict the setting - which was far more rural looking in 1863 than many people would suppose. In fact, from the angle I present in this painting no other buildings would have been in sight during the war.
Mosby appears in the center of the painting, framed by the light of the court house. He wears the captain’s uniform he wore during the raid (even though he was still a lieutenant). Mosby was photographed in this uniform, verified by a handwritten note on the image describing the uniform as “the one I wore on March 8th, 1863 on the night of General Stoughton’s capture.” The original photograph is owned by the Library of Virginia in Richmond, Va.
The raid occurred at about 2:00 a..m, when Fairfax was covered in snow. When I discovered Mosby’s daring raid occurred in the snow I was delighted. I love painting snow scenes and I receive so many requests for them. After all these years of waiting to paint John S. Mosby, I hope this scene of the “Gray Ghost” during one his greatest feats proves popular with his many admirers.
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LIMITED EDITION PRINTS
Paper Prints
Reproduction technique: Fine offset lithography on neutral pH archival quality paper using the finest fade-resistant inks.
Each print is numbered and signed by the artist and accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity.
Image Size: 18” x 27½” • Overall Size: 23” x 32½”
Signed & Numbered • Edition Size: 2,750
Signed Artist’s Proof • Edition Size: 100
Patron’s Edition, Signed & Numbered • Edition Size: 250
Mort Künstler’s Comments
As long as I have painted scenes from the Civil War, I have been asked when I would depict John Singleton Mosby, the “Gray Ghost” of the Confederacy. Finally I've done it. And the event I chose to paint is the action that made Mosby famous: the 1863 Fairfax Raid.
I especially enjoy painting a historical subject that includes an existing object, so people can go to the site and compare the historical image with the contemporary scene. The historic Fairfax County Courthouse still exists in Fairfax, Virginia today, and is a picturesque centerpiece to this painting of Mosby's most daring exploit. Historian Brian Conley of the Fairfax County Public Library obtained period photographs of the old court house which enabled me to faithfully depict the setting - which was far more rural looking in 1863 than many people would suppose. In fact, from the angle I present in this painting no other buildings would have been in sight during the war.
Mosby appears in the center of the painting, framed by the light of the court house. He wears the captain’s uniform he wore during the raid (even though he was still a lieutenant). Mosby was photographed in this uniform, verified by a handwritten note on the image describing the uniform as “the one I wore on March 8th, 1863 on the night of General Stoughton’s capture.” The original photograph is owned by the Library of Virginia in Richmond, Va.
The raid occurred at about 2:00 a..m, when Fairfax was covered in snow. When I discovered Mosby’s daring raid occurred in the snow I was delighted. I love painting snow scenes and I receive so many requests for them. After all these years of waiting to paint John S. Mosby, I hope this scene of the “Gray Ghost” during one his greatest feats proves popular with his many admirers.