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Original 1942 WALT DISNEY panorama production background for a Disney cartoon

$ 792

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Condition: As described below.
  • Brand: Disney
  • Franchise: Disney
  • Modified Item: No
  • Year: 1942
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

    THE ITEM WE ARE SELLING
    You are acquiring an original watercolor painting, a panorama production background by a noted early Waly Disney artist and animator.
    Painted by Disney artist and animator and many decades later, Pixar
    artist Arthur Fitzpatrick (1919-2015) and signed and dated 1942.
    Fitzpatrick was the designer of a futuristic 1940 Packard automobile as a very young man, and also designed two U.S. postage stamps.
    The painting is about 9 x 18 inches. Signed and dated at lower right. It's ounted on old card stock that's about 13 x 22 inches.
    Condition: There's a bullseye tear at the far left as seen in the photos.
    No markings on the back.
    We know Fitzpatrick's involvement with Disney from many sources.
    This piece would very definitely benefit from professional conservation. However it would
    also be possible to mat out the damaged area and make a very presentable piece of
    early Disney Studios history.
    NOTE
    Shipping in the U.S. only and will be by registered mail.
    ABOUT THE ARTIST (from Wikipedia)
    Arthur "Art" M. Fitzpatrick (1919–2015) was an American art director widely known for his
    automotive art and advertising illustrations. Fitz", as he was often called, was noted for
    his work was on the Pontiac "wide-track" campaign from 1959-1972, working with Van Kaufman.
    Fitzpatrick had several careers over eight decades, including automobile designing,
    art director and stamp designer. Near the end of his career, he designed two series of
    automobile stamps for the U.S. Postal Service, released in 2005 and 2008.
    Early years
    In 1936, Fitzpatrick enrolled at the Detroit Society of Arts and Crafts (now the College for
    Creative Studies). At that time, he was 18 years old and worked at Chrysler at night to pay
    his way.[1] John Tjaarda, the head stylist at the Briggs Body Company, hired him as an
    apprentice designer, where he worked on various projects for Chrysler, Packard and Lincoln.
    Fitzpatrick is credited with designing the 1940 Packard 180 sedan.
    He moved to California with his parents in 1938 and took a job with Howard "Dutch" Darrin,
    where Fitzpatrick developed designs for Darrin-modified Packards.[2]
    Fitzpatrick served in the Naval Aviation Training and the Naval Office of Research and
    Invention during World War II, then landed a contract to illustrate Mercury's postwar ads
    before he left the Navy. After World War II, Mercury signed Fitzpatrick to create
    advertising images. While at Mercury, Fitzpatrick began working with Van Kaufman, a former
    Disney animator, whose specialized in figurative and scenic drawing.
    In 1953, General Motors hired Fitzpatrick and Kaufman to serve as the Buick division's
    advertising artists. They moved to Pontiac in 1959 to produce the artwork for the Pontiac
    "wide-track" campaign, which concluded in 1972. "Wide-track" was the longest, and arguably
    the most successful, ad campaign in American automobile industry history. In 1972, Fitzpatrick
    and Kaufman moved to General Motors' European subsidiary, Opel, where they produced advertising artwork for several years.
    Later years
    Fitzpatrick continued to produce signed and numbered prints and artist proofs of his work,
    eventually adapting to digital illustration techniques. He consulted with Pixar Animation Studios
    on the development of feature movie Cars.[3]
    Fitzpatrick continued to lecture widely and appeared at venues such as the Center For Creative
    Studies and the Gilmore Car Museum in Michigan. He gave his last presentation at the
    Automobile Driving Museum in El Segundo, California in October 2015.
    Fitzpatrick drew two series of top-selling commemorative stamps for the U.S. Postal Service
    titled "America on the Move" which were released in 2005 and 2008. The first series celebrated
    1950s sporty cars, such as the Chevrolet Corvette, Ford Thunderbird and Kaiser Darrin. The second set, "tail fins and chrome," featured such cars as the 1959 Cadillac Eldorado, Chrysler 300C and Lincoln Premiere.
    Awards and honors
    Fitzpatrick was the recipient of numerous automotive and advertising industry awards and honors. Fitzpatrick received the first national Andy Award (the advertising industry's equivalent
    of the Oscar) in 1964 by the Advertising Club of New York City.[5]
    In 2012, he received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Art Center College of Design
    in Pasadena, where he had served as a guest lecturer since 1965. Fitzpatrick was an honorary
    member of the Classic Car Club of America (CCCA) and the Automotive Fine Art Society (AFAS). In Fitzpatrick's honor, the AFAS presents an award annually at the Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance.
    ABOUT FITZPATRICK'S WORK AT DISNEY
    Although the above mentions Fitzpatrick's work with former Disney animator Van Kaufman, it is clear that Fitzpatrick was working himself on Disney projects between 1938 and the early
    1940s.
    He is mentioned below as a producer on the 1941 Pluto's Playmate cartoon.
    https://www.intanibase.com/shorts.aspx?shortID=314#page=general_info
    He is listed also as an animator on Bone Trouble (1940).
    So the untold story of Art/Arthur Fitzpatrick has lots to reveal.