Air Ace Picture Library cover #52 'Ghost Plane' (Original)

Air Ace Picture Library cover #52  'Ghost Plane' art by Pino Dell'Orco

Air Ace Picture Library cover #52 'Ghost Plane' (Original)


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Artist: Pino Dell'Orco
Medium: Watercolour on Board
Size: 11" x 15" (280mm x 390mm)
Date: 1961
Code: DellOrcoAA52

This is the unique original Watercolour painting by Pino Dell'Orco.

This is the original painted art used on the cover of Air Ace Picture Library #52 titled Ghost Plane published by Fleetway Publications in May 1961.

The painting depicts a scene from World War II showing a British Hurricane fighter and the ghostly appearance of a World War One biplane. The art was used again on War Picture Library cover #1088.


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  • Artist Biography
    Pino Dell'Orco; Rome, Italy
    Pino Dell'Orco was an aeroplane-obsessed schoolboy who grew up in Rome reading the comics of the legendary German/Italian artist Curt Caesar.

    Dell'Orco was something of a prodigy and as a teenager he became an apprentice to Enrico DeSeta before joining the Favalli studios to paint movie posters. Dell'Orco had absorbed DeSeta's style so completely that he could (and indeed did) paint entire posters in his style, which DeSeta would then sign! In the late 1950s Favalli died and the studio broke up with most of the artists relocating to Milan to join the D'Amico studio.

    Dell'Orco, on the other hand, moved to London where he joined the Bryan Colmer agency. After a few years painting paperback covers Colmer approached Dell'Orco about the possibility of creating war covers for Fleetway and he jumped at the chance, going on to paint over 300 of them throughout the 1960s. As it turns, some of his fellow cover artists were his old colleagues at the Favalli studio -- Allessandro Biffignandi and Nino Caroselli, now based in Milan, though bizarrely the fact that they ended up working on the same comics was pure coincidence.

    Pino Dell'Orco's paintings were invariably masterpieces of design and this is particularly true of his many covers for Air Ace. Working on artboard roughly the size of a U.S. original comic book page he had a far more minimalist approach than DeGaspari. His paintings often employed quite thin blocks, even using the bare surface of the board as a background colour and employing quick flicks of the brush, charcoal or pencil for details. They have a dynamic immediacy that flies off the page - but even more than that - it is their composition that really makes them stand out. Dell'Orco's covers are all about overlapping shapes, negative space, clashing colours, extreme perspective and vertiginous angles. The cover to Air Ace #156 is a terrific example of his extremely angled aeroplanes criss – crossing each other – indeed, they are almost abstract cover designs, beautifully complemented in this case by the classic early 60' lettering.
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FREE DELIVERY

£0.00
£1,450.00
In Stock