| In
this artwork commissioned to celebrate the opening of the National
Air and Space Museum in 1976, Nesbitt chose to chronicle the history
of flight from the fall of Icarus in Greek mythology to the first
Apollo flight to the moon. Most of the planes can still be seen
in the main gallery of NASM, notably the Wright Brother's first
plane, and Lindberg's Spirit of St. Louis.
The first edition of this print was made in only four colors. By
using the same lithographic plate, Nesbitt was able to change the
mood of the work by adding seven more colors to this second print.
Lowell Nesbitt (1933-1993, Baltimore) attended the Tyler School
of Fine Arts and Royal College of Art in England, and taught at
Towson State University, the Baltimore Museum of Art, and the University
of Miami. A painter and a sculptor, he received many awards, including
from the Baltimore Museum of Art and the National Collection of
Fine Arts. Nesbitt's works are owned by the National Gallery of
Art, the National Air and Space Museum, the Museum of Modern Art,
the Fogg Museum, and countless others in the U.S., New Zealand,
and France.
He exhibited at the Whitney Museum, and had one-man shows at the
Corcoran Museum, the Museum De Bellas Artes, San Juan, Puerto Rico,
the University of Rochester, as well as many other galleries. The
United States Postal Service issued four stamps based on Mr. Nesbitt's
floral paintings. He also served as the official artist for the
space flights of Apollo 9 and Apollo 13.
Special Information: 11-color offset lithograph,
numbered and signed edition of 200. (Sold unframed.)
Image Dimensions: 30 x 39½ inches
Paper Dimensions: 31½ x 43 inches |