Description: With duplicate coa from mort kunstler the original was lost . This item was purchased from an art gallery they only made 100 of these prints. It’s an original GIELEE canvas print. not the paper print it’s the canvas print. Larger than the paper print. This is so beautiful dark colors lots of fine detail. A great add to your collection state value an awesome add to your collection a wonderful conversation piece . Great for your home decor man cave or even better as a gift. You won’t disappointed . The print goes for $700 and the frame is custom fit and made from kunstler another $375. To buy this if they have one like this is $1250 without tax without shipping. Check back daily as I’m selling off over 30 plus years of collecting vintage and antique collecting. New items listed daily and alot more civil war collector’s editions and other collectors items are coming slowly I have something for everyone. Giclée Canvas Prints Reproduction technique: Giclées are printed with the finest archival pigmented inks on canvas. Each print is numbered and signed by the artist Size: 18” x 40” Signed & Numbered Historical Information By sheer determination, they slogged forward toward the enemy. They were the soldiers of the Union’s Army of the Potomac, and they did not give up. Just weeks earlier, they had been dispatched in wave after wave in an assault on General Robert E. Lee’s fortified line at the battle of Fredericksburg. Their attack had failed, but only due to the misguided leadership by the army’s latest commander, General Ambrose E. Burnside, and not because of any lack of courage by the men in blue. Now, on January 21, 1863, they were advancing again – as Burnside attempted to flank Lee’s army. The march was conducted in the midst of a brutally fierce winter storm. The weather caused the road to be churned into an ocean of mud. It was “an indescribable chaos of pontoons, vehicles, and artillery,” a Federal officer would later recall – “wagons upset by the roadside, guns stalled in the mud – horses and mules buried in the liquid mud.” Even so, the battle-hardened soldiers of the Army of the Potomac did not give up. Caissons became mired in the mud. Horses and mules slipped and fell. Driving rain flailed man and beast alike – and yet these men in blue did not yield. Onward they pushed, led by Lieutenant Colonel Joshua Chamberlain of the 20th Maine. They were determined to have another contest with the enemy who had prevailed so many times before. But it would not be here and now. Battle would not come at this time. However, the “Mud March” would become a symbol for this army – a demonstration of endurance, determination and fortitude, as well as inept leadership. On a future field of fire and glory called Gettysburg, the same troops would emerge decisively victorious – due to the same type of courage and grit they displayed in the “Mud March” at Fredericksburg. Mort Künstler’s Comments In 2002, Larry Silver of Silver Companies in Fredericksburg asked me if I would be interested in doing a painting of the Army of the Potomac’s famous “Mud March.” Silver Companies own the roadside property along where the march occurred, and are developing it as a unique destination called Celebrate Virginia. Company leaders wanted to preserve the site, and somehow commemorate the “Mud March” as a symbol of the American determination that marked both Southern and Northern soldier in the Civil War. At first I wasn’t very interested in a failed military movement that bogged down in the mud of a winter storm. Then I read Frank O’Reilly’s book, The Fredericksburg Campaign: Winter War on the Rappahannock, which deals in depth with the “Mud March,” and I became intrigued with the topic – both as an expression of the American will and also as a work of historical art. I decided to accept the commission. The idea of a Civil War painting showing the struggle of man and animal against nature had tremendous potential for drama. I walked and rode through the same muddy roads on Silver Companies’ property used by the Army of the Potomac in the “Mud March” – and I was struck by the incredible hardships that these American soldiers endured. I was also impressed by the power of the storm and the conditions it created – troops struggling against the elements, cannon, artillery caissons and pontoon bridges bogged in the mud, and teams of horses fighting through the mire. Everyone and everything was wet and dirty, and lightning flashes added even more drama to the struggle. In the painting, Lt. Colonel Joshua L. Chamberlain and his brother, Tom, of the 20th Maine observe from the side of the road in the center background. General Ambrose P. Burnside, commanding general of the operation, is seen in the background on the right side of the painting with members of his staff and his official headquarters flag. In 2007, the general public will be able to walk along the route of the “Mud March,” as well as see the gun emplacements of the Union army. Thanks to Silver Companies, these Civil War points of interest will be preserved forever. I hope my work will contribute to honoring all Americans of the Civil War generation.
Price: 329.99 USD
Location: Toledo, Ohio
End Time: 2024-11-05T15:38:45.000Z
Shipping Cost: 0 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Artist: Mort Kunstler, Mort Künstler
Type: Print
Size: Medium (up to 36in.)
Color: Multi-Color
Date of Creation: 2000-Now
Civil War: The Mud March
Style: Realism
Material: Lithograph
Features: Limited Edition
Original/Licensed Reprint: Limited Edition Print
Subject: Civil War
Print Surface: Paper