SWORDERS

SWORDERS

THE CAMEL - 110HP CLERGET 1917'1916GOOD SHOOTING SIR!!

HI-RES IMAGES AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST

Chocks away! Watercolours at auction show Biggles creator W.E. Johns was
a budding artist as well as author

 

Sworders reveal set of six pictures to be offered at June 27 sale

 

A set of watercolours by WE Johns (1893-1968) coming up for auction shows that the author of the Biggles books was a keen artist as well as a writer.

To be offered by Sworders Fine Art auctioneers on June 27, the six detailed watercolours of individual biplanes and WWI dogfights are among the earliest depictions of aerial warfare or, indeed, of the ground from the air, and have not been on the market for over 30 years.

Glorying in titles such as ‘Good Shooting Sir!!’, ‘Tripehounds’ and ‘Close Work!’, the images convey all the speed and daring of the Boy’s Own style that Johns took to its apogee with his later Biggles books.

Intriguingly, one picture is dated 1916, a year before he was commissioned into the Royal Flying Corps. If it was indeed painted then, it is likely that the dogfight scene comes from Johns’ imagination rather than first-hand experience.

Shot down himself while on a bombing mission to Mannheim in Germany in 1918, Johns was lucky to escape with his life – his observer and rear-gunner died of his injuries on the same day – and remained a prisoner-of-war until the Armistice.

Johns stayed in the Royal Air Force after the war and was responsible for rejecting T.E. Lawrence as an RAF recruit for giving a false name, only to be ordered to accept him later.

It was at this time that he started his writing career, publishing more than 160 books, including almost 100 on Biggles, and launching the magazine ‘Popular Flying’ in 1932, just before ‘The Camels are Coming’, which was the first of the Biggles stories to make it into print.

Sworders are delighted to be offering the paintings, not least because Johns was a local man, having been born in Bengeo, and attending the Richard Hale School in Hertford.

“These paintings display all the energy and thrills any Biggles fan would associate with Johns,” said Sworders’ Senior Valuer Tim Turner.

“He playfully depicts speed and the air rushing past as planes leapt and dived.”

www.sworder.co.uk

 

For further information, contact info@lucasfieldmedia.com or call 07986 952850.

 

 

 

Picture captions

 

William Earl Johns (1893-1968)

‘CLOSE WORK!’ (48 SQDN) BRISTOL FIGHTERS AND FOKKER ‘TRIPES’

Signed ‘W E Johns  RAF’ l.r. and inscribed with title

watercolour and bodycolour

27cm x 38.5cm

£500-800

 

William Earl Johns (1893-1968)

‘GOOD SHOOTING SIR!!’

Signed ‘W E Johns’ and inscribed with title.

24cm X 34.5cm

£300-400

 

William Earl Johns (1893-1968)

‘TRIPEHOUNDS’

Signed indistinctly l.r. and inscribed with title

Watercolour and bodycolour.

19 x 28.5cm

£300-400

 

William Earl Johns (1893-1968)

‘1916’

Apparently unsigned, watercolour.

24 x 34cm

£300-500

 

Attributed to William Earl Johns (1893-1968)

‘OK OK!’

Signed ‘Avion’ l.r.,watercolour and bodycolour

23.5 x 34cm

£300-400

 

William Earl Johns (1893-1968)

‘THE CAMEL – 110HP CLERGET 1917’

Signed extremely faintly l.r., watercolour and bodycolour

23.5 x 33cm

£300-400

facebooktwittergoogle_plusredditpinterestlinkedinmail

Vous pourriez aussi aimer...

Laisser un commentaire

Votre adresse de messagerie ne sera pas publiée. Les champs obligatoires sont indiqués avec *

Translate »