Owner: Peter Roe
Artist:
Harry Grant Dart (All)
Artwork Details
|
DescriptionHarpers Weekly of December 31, 1910. Amazing that it's over 100 years old and in great condition. It's the oldest piece in my collection.Gouache on board, 23-1/4x16 inches. With frame 35x28 inches. It came in the frame, which I think is perfect. It's hung on a wall where I can look at it throughout the day. Its depiction of then-futuristic planes attacking warships is in the World War I gallery as a precursor to the war's air battles. Harry Grant Dart (1869-1938) was a freelance illustrator for magazines such as Harper's Weekly, Life, and Judge. The future of flight intrigued him, inspiring him to draw complex illustrations of intricate flying machines and future cities. At the same time, he was art editor for The World newspaper. He created the newspaper strip "The Explorigator," competing with Winsor McCay's "Little Nemo" in the New York Herald. The Explorigator was a fantastic airship that traveled the universe captained by Admiral Fudge with a group of friends of his age of nine or ten. (Lambiek, "The Illustrator in America: 1860-2000" by Walt Reed) Historical note: The history of aerial bombing can be traced to early history where various cultures developed myths of flying gods and deities, some of whom such as Zeus threw thunderbolts from on high at earthbound humans. Jonathan Swift's "Gulliver's Travels" (1726) describes the King of the flying island of Laputa bombarding enemies and rebellious subjects with heavy rocks thrown from the air. "The Wicked Prince" by Hans Christian Andersen (1840) has perhaps the first detailed fictional depiction of what is now called an Air Force. (Wikipedia) H. G. Wells grasped the full implications of aerial combat and air power and how it would revolutionize warfare in his 1907 book "The War in the Air." It predicted devastating strategic bombing of cities or how bombing from the air would make surface dreadnoughts obsolete in naval warfare, which only came about in World War II rather than the first which broke out in 1914. (Wikipedia) First use of airplanes in combat was not in World War I but during the Italo-Turkish War in 1911, the year after the Harper's Weekly illustration, with Italy using them for bombing. (Matt Kennedy email, Wikipedia) Social/Sharing |
About the Owner
|
Contact the OwnerUse can use a contact form to send an email to this gallery owner,
|
All |
|
![]() |
Marvel punisher War Zone Original Art Issue 38 Pg 8 John Hebert |
| Carlos Pacheco Astonishing X-Men #7 Young Professo |
| FRANK FRAZETTA DEATH DEALER IV OIL PAINTING |
| John Romita Jr. and Bob Layton - Iron Man #128, Page 16 - Demon in a Bottle! |
| STAR WARS #76 COMIC BOOK PAGE ORIGINAL ART BY RON FRENZ. |
Classified Updates |
|
Robert Hughes1/23/2026 7:28:00 PM |
|
Monty B1/23/2026 5:37:00 PM |
|
Mugen R.1/23/2026 4:52:00 PM |
|
ComicLINK.Com Auctions1/23/2026 4:47:00 PM |
|
NELSON H1/23/2026 3:11:00 PM |
|
ENRIQUE ALONSO1/23/2026 2:36:00 PM |
|
Dealer Updates |
|
RomitaMan Original Art1/24/2026 4:20:00 AM |
|
Coollines Artwork1/23/2026 9:53:00 PM |
|
Koch Comic Art1/23/2026 7:20:00 PM |
|
Anthony's Comicbook Art1/23/2026 4:51:00 PM |
|
ComiConArt1/23/2026 3:57:00 PM |
|
Catskill Comics1/23/2026 2:15:00 PM |
|
|
|