Aviation art by
Nicolas Trudgian. Nicolas Trudgian's range of German Luftwaffe aviation
art prints including the Ardennes Offensive and the first jet fighters.
Since Cranston Fine Arts took over the remaining stocks of Nicolas
Trudgian art prints which had been published over the previous 12
years by The Military Gallery These superb range of aviation art prints
are only
available for immediate dispatch from the military art print company, all
prints shown here are in stock. No other company has access to the
complete range including many art prints which have been sold out for some
time everywhere else
[ BF109 (Me109) ] [ Me262 ] [ Fw190 ] [ Ju88 ] [ Me110 ] [ Do17 ] [ He219 ] [ He162 ] [ Me163 ] [ Fokker D.R. 3 ] [ Albatros ] [ Nicolas Trudgian Luftwaffe Print List ]
Having
graduated from art college, Nicolas Trudgian spent many years as a
professional illustrator before turning to a career in fine art painting.
His crisp style of realism, attention to detail, compositional skills and
bright use of colours, immediately found favour with collectors and demand
for his original work soared on both sides of the Atlantic. Today, more
than a decade after becoming a fine art painter, Nicolas Trudgian is
firmly established within a tiny, elite group of aviation artists whose
works are genuinely collected world-wide.
When he paints an aircraft you can be
sure he has researched it in every detail and when he puts it over a
particular airfield, the chances are he has paid it a recent visit. Even
when he paints a sunset over a tropical island, or mist hanging over a
valley in China, most probably he has seen it with his own eyes.
Nick was born and raised in the
seafaring city of Plymouth, the port from which the Pilgrim Fathers set
sail in 1620, and where Sir Francis Drake played bowls while awaiting the
Spanish Armada. Growing up in a house close to the railway station within
a busy military city, the harbour always teeming with naval vessels and
the skies above resonating with the sounds of naval aircraft, it was not
at all surprising the young Nick became fascinated with trains, boats and
aircraft.
It was from his father, himself a
talented artist, that Nick acquired his love of drawing and surrounded by
so much that was inspiring, there was never a shortage of ideas for
pictures. His talent began to show at an early age and although he did
well enough at school, he always spent a disproportionate amount of time
drawing. People talked about him becoming a Naval officer or an architect
but in 1975 Nick's mind was made up. When he told his careers teacher he
wanted to go to art school the man said, 'Now come on, what do you really
want to do?"
After leaving school Nick began a
one-year foundation course at the Plymouth College of Art. Now armed with
an impressive portfolio containing paintings of jet aircraft, trains, even
wildlife, he was immediately accepted at every college he applied to join.
He chose a course at the Falmouth College of Art in Cornwall specialising
in technical illustration and paintings of machines and vehicles for
industry. It was perfect for Nick, and he was to become one of the star
pupils. One of the lecturers commented at the time: "Every college
needs someone with a talent like Nick to raise the standards sky high; he
carried all the other students along with him, and created an effect which
will last for years to come." Two weeks after leaving art college
Nick blew every penny he had on a trip to South Africa to ride the great
steam trains across the desert, sketching them at every opportunity.
Returning to England, in best traditions
of all young artists, he struggled to make a living. Paintings by an
unknown artist didn't fetch much despite the painstaking effort and time
Nick put into each work, so when the college he had recently left offered
him a job as a lecturer, he jumped at the chance. The money was good and
he discovered that he really enjoyed teaching.
Throughout the 1970s Nick was much
involved with a railway preservation society near Plymouth and it was
through the railway society that he had his first pictures reproduced as
prints. But Nick felt he needed to advance his career and in summer 1985
Nick moved away from Cornwall to join an energetic new design studio in
Wiltshire. Here he painted detailed artwork for many major companies
including Rolls Royce, General Motors, Volvo Trucks, Alfa Romeo and, to
his delight, the aviation and defence industries. He remembers the job as
exciting though stressful, often requiring him to work right through the
night to meet a client's deadline. Here he learned to be disciplined and
fast.
Towards the end of the 1980's Nick had
the chance to work for the Military Gallery. This was the break that for
years he had been striving towards and with typical enthusiasm, flung
himself into his new role. After completing a series of aviation posters,
including a gigantic painting to commemorate the seventy-fifth anniversary
of the Royal Air Force, Nick's first aviation scene to be published as a
limited edition was launched by the Military Gallery in 1991. Despite the
fact he was unknown in the field, it was an immediate success.
Over the past decade Nick has earned a
special reputation for giving those who love his work much more than just
aircraft in his paintings. He goes to enormous lengths with his
backgrounds, filling them with interesting and accurate detail, all
designed to help give the aircraft in his paintings a tremendous sense of
location and purpose. His landscapes are quite breathtaking and his
buildings demonstrate an uncanny knowledge of perspective but it is the
hardware in his paintings which are most striking. Whether it is an
aircraft, tank, petrol bowser, or tractor, Nick brings it to life with all
the inordinate skill of a truly accomplished fine art painter.
A prodigious researcher, Nick travels
extensively in his constant quest for information and fresh ideas. He has
visited India, China, South Africa, South America, the Caribbean and
travels regularly to the United States and Canada. He likes nothing better
than to be out and about with sketchbook at the ready and if there is an
old steam train in the vicinity, well that's a bonus!