Simon Atack

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Latest news. The entire Simon W Atack naval art prints have been purchased by Cranston Fine arts. Simon W Atack complete military gallery naval prints are available. This leading naval and aviation artist. Simon Atack's prints of the Bismarck, Scharnhorst, USS Wasp, Graf Spee, HMS Hood and RAF Avro Lancaster published by Military Gallery are now solely available from the military art company, a division of Cranston Fine Arts.

View aviation prints by Simon Atack

Battleship Bismarck by Simon Atack.

With her raked bo proudly slicing through the morning swell of Norwegian waters, the mighty 41,000 ton battleship Bismarck leads her consort, the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen, with destroyers Z10, Z16 and Z23 among her escorts, into the approaches to Korsfjord near Bergen, at 0800hrs on 21st May 1941. Aboard, Bismarcks captain Ernst Lindemann was plotting a voyage that was to result in one of the greatest epics in the annals of naval warfare. As they steam towards Grimstadtfjord, an Arado Ar196A-2 floatplane gives a fly-by salute to the flotilla, this aircraft serving with I./Bordfliegerstaffel 195 which, together with 5./196 was responsible for providing aircraft for German naval vessels. Operated by Luftwaffe crews, and affectionately known as Eyes of the Fleet, the Arado 196 was specially designed for shipboard operation - with an airframe sturdy enought to withstand the rigours of catapult launching it was a highly effective armed Recce aircraft. Bismarck carried no fewer than four Arado 196 floatplanes, one always at readiness on the catapult, with three hangared aft of the funnel. As she sailed, a reconnaissance Spitfire had spotted Bismarcks movements and the British Home Fleet were alerted. The old battlecruiser Hood and new battleship Prince of Wales were despatched north-west from Scapa Flow to join the cruisers Norfolk and Suffolk in the Denmark Strait for a possible interception. And the rest is history: as Bismarck entered the Denmark Strait the two forces met. Hood, pride of the Royal Navy, received a direct hit in the ammunition magazin by a shell from Bismarck and sank so quickly that only three of her crew survived. Stunned by such severe loss, Churchill ordered the Bismarck to be sunk at all cost. Hunted down by the Home Fleet, with her rudder damaged and unable to steer, Bismarck was reduced to a mass of twisted steel by British naval gunfire, finally rolling over and sinking at 10.45 in the morning of the 27th of May. Thus ended one of the most compelling sea chases in naval history. The magnificent German battleship Bismarck at the outset of her final voyage, just five days before her fateful encounter with the British Home Fleet in the north Atlantic, May 1941.

Signed limited edition of 500 prints, with 3 signatures. Print paper size 31 inches x 23.5 inches (79cm x 60cm). Price £145.00

Signatories: Maschinenobergefreiter Otto Peters, Unteroffizier Heinrich Kuhnt (deceased) and Matrosengefreiter Willi Treinis (deceased).


Limited edition of 25 artist proofs, with 3 signatures. Print paper size 31 inches x 23.5 inches (79cm x 60cm). Price £

Signatories: Maschinenobergefreiter Otto Peters, Unteroffizier Heinrich Kuhnt (deceased) and Matrosengefreiter Willi Treinies (deceased).


Simon Atack Promotional Flyer. A4 Size Double Sheet 11.5 inches x 8 inches (30m x 21cm) . Price £1.50

ITEM CODE DHM2612

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Bismarck by Randall Wilson.

Bismarck by Randall Wilson.

Buy With This For Only : £205

Escort to the Scharnhorst by Simon Atack

Escort to the Scharnhorst by Simon Atack

Buy With This For Only : £200

Escort to the Scharnhorst by Simon Atack

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Signed limited edition of 500 prints. £105.00
Limited edition of 25 artist proofs. £130.00

Escort to the Scharnhorst by Simon Atack

When the German battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau entered Brest in March, 1941, between them they had sunk a total of 22 ships during their North Atlantic operations. Laying in port however, they became a target for constant air attack, Scharnhorst being damaged by bombs, and in February 1942 the decision was made to break out with the famous Channel Dash. Scharnhorst led the flotilla in a daring passage through the English Channel, heading for the sanctuary of Wilhelmshaven. They all got through but, striking two mines en-route, it was March 1943 before the Scharnhorst was able to resume battle operations when, under heavy escort, she sailed for Norway. Simon Atacks panoramic seascape depicts a scene from Operation Paderborn as Scharnhorst ploughs through a lively swell with Fw190s of I./JG5, based at Oslo Fornebu, providing fighter cover. Steaming in company with destroyers Z-28 and Erich Steinbrinck, the mighty German battleship has departed Gotenhafen and is heading towards Bogen Bay, near Narvik in Norway. But Scharnhorsts days were numbered. On 26 December 1943 the huge battleship attacked a convoy off North Cape, but in the heavy seas Scharnhorst became detached from her destroyer escort. With the British Home Fleet aware of her position, and intentions, she was intercepted, the Britishbattleship Duke of York landing a barrage of 14-inch shells on the mighty German warship. The blows were fatal, the coup-de-grace coming shortly after, when 11 torpedoes sent the magnificent but deadly battleship quickly to the bottom. There were just 36 survivors.

Signed limited edition of 500 prints. Paper size 30 inches x 22.5 inches (76cm x 57cm). Price £105.00

Signed by Matrosen Obgefreiter Wilhelm Alsen.


Limited edition of 25 artist proofs. Paper size 30 inches x 22.5 inches (76cm x 57cm). Price £130.00

Signed by Matrosen Obgefreiter Wilhelm Alsen.

ITEM CODE SA0002

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Battleship Bismarck by Simon Atack.

Battleship Bismarck by Simon Atack.

Buy With This For Only : £200

Atlantic Comrades by Ivan Berryman.

Atlantic Comrades by Ivan Berryman.

Buy With This For Only : £190

The Graf Spee by Simon Atack

The pocket-battleship Graf Spee catches the flood tide, making speed through a choppy cross-current as she leaves the German naval port of Wilhelmshaven for final trials a few weeks before the outbreak of war on 3rd September, 1939. Under her Captain, Hans Langsdorf, she will soon be on station in the South Atlantic in readiness for action against merchant shipping, vital to the survival of island Britain.

Signed limited edition of 500 prints. Image size 16 inches x 25 inches (41cm x 64cm). Price £95.00


Limited edition of 25 artist proofs. Image size 16 inches x 25 inches (41cm x 64cm). Price £135.00


Jurgen Oesten signature edition of 100 prints (Nos 301 - 350 and 451 - 500) from the signed limited edition of 500 prints. Image size 16 inches x 25 inches (41cm x 64cm). Price £165.00

Signed by Jurgen Oesten.

ITEM CODE DHM2184

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Admiral Graf Spee  enters Montevideo by Ivan Berryman.

Admiral Graf Spee enters Montevideo by Ivan Berryman.

Buy With This For Only : £155

The Battle of the River Plate by Randall Wilson.

The Battle of the River Plate by Randall Wilson.

Buy With This For Only : £180

Farewell the Hood by Simon Atack.

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Click the editions below.

Signed limited edition of 500 prints. £118.00
Limited edition of 25 artist proofs. £145.00

Farewell the Hood by Simon Atack.

HMS Hood, Britains largest warship and pride of the Royal Navy, steams majestically through the Swept Channel on 22 May, 1941. Having fuelled at the Scapa Flow naval base in Scotland, she steers clear of floats suspending torpedo and submarine nets, as she heads for open water and the North Sea. The crew of a naval cutter wave farewell as the mighty battleship departs upon what will prove to be her final voyage.

Signed limited edition of 500 prints. Image size 16 inches x 25 inches (41cm x 64cm). Price £118.00

Signed by Lieutenant Ted Briggs RN (deceased)


Limited edition of 25 artist proofs. Image size 16 inches x 25 inches (41cm x 64cm). Price £145.00

Signed by Lieutenant Ted Briggs RN.

ITEM CODE DHM2185

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HMS Hood and HMS Express Departing from Portsmouth 1935 by Ivan Berryman

HMS Hood and HMS Express Departing from Portsmouth 1935 by Ivan Berryman

Buy With This For Only : £190

HMS Hood by Ivan Berryman.

HMS Hood by Ivan Berryman.

Buy With This For Only : £195

 

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Signed  Limited Edition Art Print
Signed Artist Proof
Battleship Bismarck by Simon Atack.

The magnificent German battleship Bismarck at the outset of her final voyage, just five days before her fateful encounter with the British Home Fleet in the north Atlantic, May 1941.

Signed limited edition of 500 prints, with 3 signatures.  Print paper size 31" x 23.5" (79cm x 60cm) Print price £95.

Signatories: Maschinenobergefreiter Otto Peters, Unteroffizier Heinrich Kuhnt and Matrosengefreiter Willi Treinies.

Limited edition of 25 artist proofs, with 3 signatures.  Print paper size 31" x 23.5" (79cm x 60cm)  Price £110

Signatories: Maschinenobergefreiter Otto Peters, Unteroffizier Heinrich Kuhnt and Matrosengefreiter Willi Treinies.

ORDER CODE DHM2612

 

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Signed Limited Edition Art Print
Signed Artist Proof
 Escort to the Scharnhorst by Simon Atack

Depicting a scene from Operation Paderborn as Scharnhorst ploughs through a lively swell with Fw190s of I./J65, based at Oslo Fornebu, providing fighter cover. Steaming in company with destroyers Z-28 and Erich Steinbrinck, the mighty German battleship has departed Gotenhafen and is heading towards Bogen Bay, near Narvik in Norway. She later sank with only 36 survivors.

Signed limited edition of 500 prints, price £80 ($145). Plus 25 artists proofs, price £115 ($200). Overall print size 30" x 22.5". Order code SA2.

Signed by Wilhelm Alsen who was starboard gunner on Scharnhorst.

 

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Signed Limited Edition Art Print
Signed Artist Proof
 

Operation Calendar by Simon Atack

The besieged island of Malta, the tiny fortress island so vital to Allied strategy in the Mediterranean, was in April 1942, the most heavily bombed place on earth.  With some 600 fighters and bombers based in Sicily, the Axis air forces were intent on neutralising the island, to gain total air and sea supremacy in the region.  Against this continual aerial onslaught, by early April the RAF could muster just 6 serviceable fighters.  The vital naval dockyards and airfields were in danger of annihilation.  Following an urgent cable from Winston Churchill to President Roosevelt, the carrier USS Wasp embarked 52 Mk Vc Spitfires of 601 and 603 Squadrons and, under Captain J W Reeves Jr, USN, sailed from Glasgow on 14 April.  In the early hours of 19 April, escorted by the cruiser Renown and four British and two American destroyers, the heavily laden carrier slipped through the Straits of Gibraltar in darkness.  "Operation Calendar" began early the following day, when Wasp launched 11 of her F4F Wildcat fighters to provide air cover while the Spitfires started taking off.  With the sun already up, by 0645 all 47 serviceable fighters were despatched.  Monitoring all this activity, Luftwaffe Me109s lay in wait, attacking as the Spitfires made landfall.  All but one landed safely, and from their arrival the Spitfires began to dominate the sky above the beleaguered island, and Malta was saved.

Signed limited edition of 500 prints plus 25 artists proofs. Serial number DHM2260. Image size 23" x 30¼". Print price £80  

Artists proof price £110  

 

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Signed Limited Edition Art Print
Signed Artist Proof

The Graf Spee by Simon Atack

With war but a few months old, the German pocket-battleship Graf Spee was roaming the South Atlantic trade routes sinking British merchant shipping with impunity. Within a few weeks, under the wily captain Hans Langsdorf, the battleship had sunk or captured merchantmen totalling over 50,000 tons, without loss of life to either side. Commodore Henry Harwood hunted Graf Spee down, his three Royal Navy cruisers engaging the battleship on 13th of December 1939, in what became the Battle of the River Plate. During the two hour engagement, in which two British cruisers were badly damaged, Graf Spee had also been hit, and put into the neutral port of Montevideo for repairs. Believing Harwoods force to be larger than it was, trapped in port, Langsdorf scuttled the great warship in the harbour. It was the Royal Navy's first major coup of the war.

The painting shows Graf Spee making her way through a choppy cross-current as she leaves the German port of Wilhelmshaven for final trials just a few weeks before the outbreak of war in September 1939.

Signed limited edition of 500 prints plus 25 artists proofs. Serial number DHM2184. Image size 16" x 25¼". Print price £80 ($145).

Artists proof price £100 ($180).  

  

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Signed Limited Edition Art Print
Signed Artist Proof
Farewell the Hood by Simon Atack

A study of HMS Hood, pride of the Royal Navy, as she steams majestically through the Swept Channel departing Scapa Flow on 22nd May 1941. Having fuelled at the naval base in Scotland, she steers clear of floats suspending torpedo and submarine nets, as she heads for open water and the North Sea. The crew of a naval cutter wave farewell as the mighty battleship departs upon what will prove to be her final voyage: just a few days later she encountered the German battleship Bismarck in the Denmark Straits. In the exchange that followed, Bismarck's second and third salvoes made direct hits on Hood. Her magazines exploded and the mighty battleship sank in minutes taking all but three of her complement of 1420 sailors with her.

Prints are signed by Ted Briggs the only living survivor.

Signed limited edition of 500 prints plus 25 artists proofs. Serial number DHM2185. Image size 16" x 24¾". Print price £90 ($145).   less than 50 copies remain of this sold out edition form the publisher

Artists proof price £125 ($200). 

Simon Atack: About the Artist

Simon began drawing aircraft and warships at a very early age, his sketches mysteriously appearing on the end-papers of his parents hardback novels, nursery books, and any other clean white surface he came across. Invariably using biro, still one of his preferred sketching instruments today, his efforts were indelible, if not always appreciated at the time.

At about 8 years of age he was given his first set of oil paints, possibly to save the family library, and has painted with little else ever since. After regularly winning the school art prize it became obvious to all concerned with his education what his next step should be, and at age 16 he commenced formal training at Wakefield College of Art. There he studied graphic design, illustration and life drawing, all of which matured his ability to sketch into a disciplined skill. Though grounded in the disciplines of art during this period of training, his skills as a painter in oil are however largely self-taught.

After leaving art college, like thousands of other art students, the young artist found it impossible to get a job where he could employ his skills. Though the agencies he approached liked his portfolio, without practical experience he was always left to try his luck at the next interview. Recognising the need to find an alternative line of work, and with his interest in aircraft still very much alive, the young Simon Atack joined the Royal Air Force.

Following training, upon arrival at his first posting, by a stroke of good fortune his new Commanding Officer noticed the word artist on his file, and asked Simon if he'd like to produce a few aeroplane pictures to cheer the walls up a bit! It was an opportunity the ex-art student, now professional airman seized with both hands. His first pictures soon led to commissions for other units, Squadrons, and individuals throughout the RAF, to such a degree that in no time he became an unofficial military artist for the Service.

However, his RAF days were not long to end and his success had given him the encouragement to pursue a career as a full-time professional artist upon his return to civilian life. Throughout the 1980s, like any young artist making his way, he would draw and paint the wide variety of subjects that clients asked him to tackle. Florals proved popular, with daisies in particular demand! Two of his large examples being exhibited at the 1989 Paris Salon, which brought commissions for similar works from galleries and corporate clients all over Europe. Landscape paintings were published as prints, a series of paintings for greeting cards was commissioned, and at last the fledgling professional artist began to feel he was starting to make his mark.

Working from his studio in a haunted 18th century farmhouse in Yorkshire, by the mid 1990s he returned to his favourite subjects, painting aircraft, ships and the sea. Much influenced in his early career by the aircraft and ship paintings of Roy Cross, Simon remembers slavishly copying this artist paintings in an effort to get some idea of how they were constructed, even spending his spare cash collecting aircraft model kits solely for the Roy Cross artwork on the boxes! He credits much of his inspiration today to this artist. In common with many aviation artists, he also much admired  the work of Frank Wootton, particularly the beauty of his cloudscapes and his rich use of colours.

The standards set by both these artists were the benchmarks Simon strove to attain in his paintings, employing a mix of technical accuracy and painterly vision. In later years he has come to appreciate and enjoy the work of David Shepherd, who became a mentor during the long climb of his career, and he is a great admirer of Robert Taylor whose paintings, according to Simon, are everything aviation art should be.

Today Simon Atack's has achieved the kind of recognition that his blend of natural talent and studious application deserves. His original paintings, always in great demand, have great impact and dimension. Now published by Military Gallery, his fine quality work is available to a wide audience where his talent will be easily recognized by those who appreciate the finer points of aviation and maritime art.

 

 

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