31/12/2024
‘BEACH HEAD STRIKE FORCE’ (1991)
Vought’s distinctive gull-winged F4U Corsair was without doubt one of finest piston-engine fighters of all time, and few would dispute its claim to be the best carrier-borne aircraft of the Second World War. And whilst Corsairs served with distinction with the British, New Zealanders and later with the French, the F4U will always be best remembered for its Pacific operations in the hands of U.S. Navy and Marine Corps pilots.
Originally published in 1991 the limited edition print remains one of Robert’s most sought-after pieces. With all his unmistakable elements, the canvas sings to the roar of Pratt and Whitney engines as a gaggle of F4U Corsairs make a low-level strafing run on the lookout for ground targets in support of landings in the Marshall Islands in early 1944. Below them a Japanese AM6 Zero lies decaying on the sandy beach, the victim of an earlier aerial contest whilst, in the distance, American naval vessels bombard enemy positions as landing craft bring the invasion force ashore.
‘The island scene is largely accurate, although I added a few of my own touches to suit the composition; but whatever I changed can’t have been of consequence because a U.S. Marine came up to me at a reception at Tamsen Munger’s gallery in Fresno, California and said: ‘Robert I landed on that very beach. You’ve painted the island just as I remember it, except I think you’ve put in too many palm trees!’ He then presented me with a piece of coral from the island which he’d picked up all those years ago.’ – Robert Taylor Air Combat Paintings VIII, 1996
Framing by Aces High Gallery