Mort Kunstler Prints
About Mort Künstler
He's renowned as “the premier historical artist in America.” When Mort Künstler began his emphasis on Civil War art in the late 1980s, he had already accomplished more than a half-dozen artists could hope to accomplish in a collective lifetime. From portraits of prehistoric American life to the odyssey of the space shuttle, Mort Künstler had painted America's story.
When he placed his focus on Civil War art, Mr. Künstler quickly established himself as the country's most-collected Civil War artist, and earned unprecedented acclaim within the genre of Civil War art. "Mort Künstler is the foremost Civil War artist of our time -- if not of all time," says Dr. James I. Robertson Jr., the dean of Civil War historians and the author of the celebrated biography, Stonewall Jackson. "To study his paintings," says Robertson, "is to simply see history alive." Pulitzer Prize-winning historian James McPherson concurs. "Of all the artists working in the Civil War field," he observes, "none captures the human element, the aura of leadership, the sense of being there and sharing in the drama, quite like Mort Künstler. He has that enviable talent of being able to re-create history on canvas and to translate events into art."
Harold Holzer, Vice-President of Communications and leading authority on Civil War art with New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art, believes the popular enthusiasm for Mr. Künstler's work is due to his artistic talent as much as to the authenticity of his art. "He deserves double credit" says Holzer, "His art is terrific and he's attracted thousands of people to Civil War art."
“Mort Künstler is second to none in his portrayal of battle, whether it is the carnage at Antietam’s bloody Lane or history’s first clash of ironclad warships. And he is unequaled in pictorial descriptions of the marching, the waiting, the maneuvering. Künstler is also unsurpassed in his portrayal of winter scenes, with the shimmering blue-white of snow at dusk casting a half light of eerie beauty.”
- Prof. James M. McPherson Author, Battle Cry of Freedom
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Mr. Künstler's talent and training were nurtured from an early age. After studying art at Brooklyn College, U.C.L.A. and Pratt Institute, he became a successful illustrator in New York where he received assignments from book and magazine publishers. An important part of his training resulted from his affiliation with National Geographic Magazine. It was through their assignments of historical subject matter that he learned the value of working with historians so that accuracy was firmly imbued into his concept.
In the early 1970s, Mr. Künstler's paintings began attracting the attention of serious art collectors. At first the interest was mainly in his Western subject matter, but after a major museum retrospective exhibition and a one-man show at the prestigious Hammer Galleries in New York City, he became known as an important painter of historic subjects. Since his first show in 1977, Mr. Künstler has had thirteen more highly successful one-man shows at Hammer Galleries, his most recent in December 2006.
In 1982, a commission from CBS-TV to do a painting for the mini-series, The Blue and the Gray directed Mr. Künstler's interest towards the Civil War. Although the research was painstaking, he devoted much time to making sure that his painting The High Water Mark was meticulously correct. The painting was unveiled at the Gettysburg National Military Park Museum on July 2, 1988 in celebration of the 125th anniversary of the battle. Since then, Mr. Künstler has been concentrating on Civil War subject matter.
In 1986, more than two hundred Künstler artworks were published in the book, The American Spirit - The Paintings of Mort Künstler, with text by famed historian Henry Steele Commager. An updated edition of The American Spirit was published in 1994 by Rutledge Hill Press. Images of the Civil War - The Paintings of Mort Künstler, with text by Pulitzer Prize winning author James McPherson, was published in 1992. Gettysburg - The Paintings of Mort Künstler, also with text by James McPherson was published by Turner Publishing as a companion piece to the epic feature film and mini-series Gettysburg. In 1993, a one-hour television special, entitled Images of the Civil War - The Paintings of Mort Künstler, was shown on the A&E network.
His reputation for both accuracy and artistic mastery earned Mr. Künstler a commission from the U.S. Postal Service in 1992 to do a painting of the Buffalo Soldiers. The stamp was issued in April of 1994. Other books featuring his art include Jackson and Lee: Legends in Gray, with text by James I. Robertson, Jr., Images of the Old West: The Paintings of Mort Künstler with Text by Michael Aubrecht, Dee Brown, Mort Künstler's Civil War: The North and Mort Künstler's Civil War: The South, Mort Künstler's Old West: Cowboys, and Mort Künstler's Old West: Indians - which were all published by Rutledge Hill Press.
In 1998, the Nassau County Museum of Art in New York sponsored a one-man exhibition entitled The Civil War - The Paintings of Mort Künstler. More than 130 paintings, drawings, and sculptures were gathered together from around the nation. The seven-week exhibition attracted more than 30,000 visitors, surpassing the previous attendance record set by a Picasso exhibit. Due to the success of this exhibit, the Nassau County Museum of Art held a second one-man exhibit of Mr. Künstler’s work in 2006 entitled The American Spirit – The Paintings of Mort Künstler.
Gov. Gilmore & Künstler
In Virginia, Governor James Gilmore officially declared a "Mort Künstler Day" in 1999, and in 2000, Governor Gilmore officially opened an exhibition at the Museum of the Confederacy in Richmond called The Confederate Spirit: The Paintings of Mort Künstler, which was the first one-man exhibition of a contemporary artist ever held at the museum. Later that year, a book by the same name was published by Rutledge Hill Press with a narrative by James I. Robertson, Jr. In a similar ceremony north of the Mason-Dixon line in Ohio, Mr. Künstler was selected as the Official Artist of the Ohio State Bicentennial, and his painting of General John Hunt Morgan's raid through Ohio was featured in a long-term exhibit at the Cincinnati Museum Center.
Robertson & Künstler
Mr. Künstler continues to participate in a variety of charitable causes that are close to his heart. In 2001, following America's 9-11 tragedy, he contributed one of his most popular limited edition prints - "Old Glory" - for a fund-raiser by the American Red Cross. The non-profit program raised more than $150,000 for the Red Cross to use on behalf of the victims of the 9-11 attack. Since 1998, Mr. Künstler has been a supporter of Timber Ridge School - a residential institution serving emotionally disturbed adolescent boys in Winchester, Virginia. Sales of ornaments featuring his art have raised over $700,000 for the school. In 2003, a new residence hall at the school was named Mort Künstler Hall in his honor.
In 2001, Mr. Künstler was named the official artist for the motion picture Gods and Generals, and in 2002 Greenwich Workshop Press published his newest book: Gods and Generals: The Paintings of Mort Künstler. He also served as a consultant for the heralded Ron Maxwell motion picture, Gods and Generals, and his art publisher, American Spirit Publishing, released a series of historical Civil War limited edition prints of key historical events on which the motion picture was based. In 2002, Mr. Künstler became the first artist to be honored by a 6- month one-man exhibition at the new National Civil War Museum in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. In 2003, he received the Jefferson Davis Southern Heritage Award from the Military Order of the Stars and Bars - composed of descendants of the Southern officer corps - which followed his 2001 receipt of the Henry Timrod Southern Culture Award by the M.O.S.B.
Mr. Künstler has also been named as an Official Artist for the H.L. Hunley, and unveiled a new painting of the H.L. Hunley during ceremonies in Charleston, South Carolina on April 17-18, 2004. He has also been commissioned to design and furnish all the artwork for the Middletown, Ohio Veterans Memorial, which was unveiled on July 4, 2004.
In 2010 the Nassau County Museum of Art held their third exhibit of Künstler’s Civil War paintings in commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. For Us the Living - The Civil War in Paintings by Mort Künstler consisted of approximately 50 paintings accompanied by a selection of documentary objects. For the first time, visitors to a Künstler exhibition gained an inside look into the artist’s creative process through a display of his sketches, drawings, and preliminary studies.
Mr. Künstler was commissioned to paint an accurate depiction of Washington crossing the Delaware. Washington's Crossing was unveiled at the New-York Historical Society on December 26, 2011 - the 235th anniversary of the actual event - and received great critical acclaim.
In recognition of the 150th anniversary of the Civil War, a collection of over thirty original Civil War paintings by Künstler have been on exhibit at various museums. This traveling exhibit started in February 2012 at the VMI Museum in Lexington, Virginia and continued on to the Virginia Museum of the Civil War at New Market Battlefield State Historic Park and the South Carolina State Museum in Columbia, South Carolina. During 2013 the Reading Public Museum in Reading, Pennsylvania will host the exhibit, followed by the North Carolina Museum of History in Raleigh, North Carolina. The traveling exhibit will conclude at the Washington County Museum of Fine Arts in Hagerstown, Maryland in 2014.
On September 13, 2012, the U. S. National Archives in Washington, DC hosted “An Evening with Mort Künstler.” Mr. Künstler discussed pivotal moments in his career with Laurie Norton Moffat, Executive Director of the Norman Rockwell Museum, accompanied by a slide show of his works.
Mr. Künstler was the sixth artist honored by the Booth Western Art Museum of Cartersville, Georgia with their Lifetime Achievement Award on February 15, 2014. He will join Howard Terpning, G. Harvey, Ken Riley, Fred Fellow, and Glenna Goodacre as the only honorees in the history of the award.
In recognition of the 150th anniversary of the Civil War, a collection of over thirty original Civil War paintings by Künstler have been on exhibit at various museums. This traveling exhibit started in February 2012 at the VMI Museum in Lexington, Virginia and continued on to the Virginia Museum of the Civil War at New Market Battlefield State Historic Park, the South Carolina State Museum in Columbia, the Reading Public Museum in Reading, Pennsylvania, followed by the North Carolina Museum of History in Raleigh, concluding at the Washington County Museum of Fine Arts in Hagerstown, Maryland in 2014.
In 2013, Künstler began a major body of work on the American Revolution. These new works were featured in the book The New Nation: The Creation of the United States in Paintings and Eyewitness Accounts – The Art of Mort Künstler published by Sterling Publishing in October 2014. The Heckscher Museum of Art in Huntington, NY, curated and hosted an exhibit of these new paintings in Mort Künstler: The New Nation, December 10, 2016 through April 2, 2017. The exhibit featured 34 works in all, including Künstler's classics, Washington's Crossing and Reading the Declaration of Independence to the Troops.
The Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Massachusetts held a major retrospective exhibit of Mr. Künstler's paintings from November 2014 to March 2015. The exhibit titled Mort Künstler: The Art of Adventure included over 80 pieces from early childhood work through his most recent works. The exhibit travelled through May 2016, being on view at the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley in Winchester, VA, The Citadelle Art Foundation in Canadian, TX, and The Long Island Museum of American Art, History and Carriages in Stony Brook, NY.
Probably no other artist in our nation's history has recorded so many events in American history and certainly no one has painted them with the extraordinary authenticity and drama as Mort Künstler.
Mort Künstler is America's artist.
Rendezvous with Destiny by Mort Kunstler
Gen. John Buford at Gettysburg, June 30, 1863 Historical InformationHe was first on the field – and may have saved the war's greatest battle fo...
View full detailsBuffalo Soldiers of the West by Mort Kunstler
LIMITED EDITION PRINTSPaper PrintsReproduction technique: Fine offset lithography on neutral pH archival quality paper using the finest fade-resist...
View full detailsWashington's "Watch Chain" by Mort Kunstler
West Point, November 30, 1779 Reviews “This magnificent painting… is superb. Besides the obvious beauty of the art itself, there is another fact...
View full detailsWinds of Change, The - by Mort Kunstler
Washington at Valley Forge, March 4, 1778 Historical InformationThe soldiers serving under General George Washington in December 1777 could not und...
View full detailsWorld Turned Upside Down, The - by Mort Kunstler
Yorktown, Va., October 19, 1781 Historical InformationFinally, they had won. After more than six years of warfare, the War for Independence wa...
View full detailsCulper Spy, The - by Mort Kunstler
Oyster Bay, Long Island, 1779 Historical InformationWashington loved spy craft. Though far from being an expert spymaster, he nevertheless enj...
View full detailsMy Friend, the Enemy by Mort Kunstler
Rappahannock River, Va., December 25, 1862 Historical Information"We talked the matter over and could have settled the war in thirty minutes h...
View full detailsHancock the Superb by Mort Kunstler
The Irish Brigade at Antietam Historical InformationSo many times, he was there when decisive leadership was so desperately needed. In the Peni...
View full detailsAngel of the Battlefield, The by Mort Kunstler
Historical InformationIn December of 1862, the small town of Fredericksburg, Virginia bore witness to one of the most one-sided battles of the enti...
View full detailsAngel of Marye's Heights by Mort Kunstler
Historical InformationHe believed he had to help. Sergeant Richard Rowland Kirkland looked out on the field of battle at Fredericksburg, Virginia a...
View full detailsRush's Lancers by Mort Kunstler
LIMITED EDITION PRINTSGiclée Canvas Prints Reproduction technique: Giclées are printed with the finest archival pigmented inks on canvas.Each print...
View full detailsAbsolution Before Victory by Mort Kunstler
Paper PrintsReproduction technique: Fine offset lithography on neutral pH archival quality paper using the finest fade-resistant inks.Each print is...
View full detailsGeneral Orders 100 by Mort Kunstler
Paper PrintsReproduction technique: Fine offset lithography on neutral pH archival quality paper using the finest fade-resistant inks.Each print is...
View full detailsFreedom of the Press by Mort Kunstler
Historical InformationMaintaining news media that were free to criticize the authorities was a primary concern in Colonial America. Accordingly, at...
View full detailsRough Riders, The - by Mort Kunstler
Historical InformationWhen the sinking of the battleship Maine in Cuban waters made war almost inevitable, Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore...
View full detailsRogers' Rangers On Lake Champlain by Mort Kunstler
Historical InformationTwo centuries of conflict came to a climax in the mid-eighteenth century in what Europeans called the Seven Years War and Ame...
View full detailsHero of Little Round Top by Mort Kunstler
Historical InformationIt was a desperate moment. The troops of the 20th Maine had been ordered to defend the left flank of the Federal line at Gett...
View full detailsCapture of Fort Motte, The - by Mort Kunstler
Historical InformationLogically the British should have put down the American rebellion with comparative ease. Britain was, after all, the most pow...
View full detailsRush to the Summit by Mort Kunstler
Chamberlain at Gettysburg, July 2, 1863 Historical InformationThirty-four year-old Colonel Joshua L. Chamberlain’s orders were clear and urg...
View full detailsRebel Sons of Erin by Mort Kunstler
Ft. Donelson Campaign February 13, 1862 Historical InformationThey too fought for the Cause. America's Irish community – like so many other Ameri...
View full detailsNew General, The - by Mort Kunstler
Winfield S. Hancock Historical InformationIn the spring of 1861 when asked about his sentiments regarding the war, Winfield Hancock replied: “My po...
View full detailsMud March, The - by Mort Kunstler
Historical InformationBy sheer determination, they slogged forward toward the enemy. They were the soldiers of the Union’s Army of the Potomac, and...
View full detailsLincoln-Douglas Debates, The - by Mort Kunstler
Historical InformationThe indignation which Abraham Lincoln felt about the Dred Scott decision led him back to politics in 1857. In the legendary s...
View full detailsLincoln, Family Man by Mort Kunstler
Historical Information:Although he was a well paid Illinois attorney when he ran for president, Abraham Lincoln had been born in backwoods poverty....
View full detailsLast Leave by Mort Kunstler
Historical InformationThe soldier’s life was a melancholy one; songs and stories always evoked thoughts of home. North and south, few young men had...
View full detailsIn the Hands of Providence by Mort Kunstler
Chamberlain at Fredericksburg, Va., Dec. 13, 1862 Historical Information:Finally, it was their turn. For hours, Lieutenant Colonel Joshua L. Ch...
View full detailsHold at All Cost by Mort Kunstler
Gen. J. Buford, Gettysburg, July 1, 1863 Mort Künstler’s CommentsIn the painting, General John Buford and his staff have taken positions beh...
View full detailsGlorious Fourth, The - by Mort Kunstler
Historical InformationOne of the greatest military victories in the history of the Western Hemisphere took place with the surrender of Vicksburg, o...
View full detailsGettysburg Address, The - by Mort Kunstler
Historical InformationWhen Lincoln was invited to make his speech, Americans were still trying to recover from the shock of 51,000 casualties incur...
View full detailsFighting 69th, The - by Mort Kunstler
Mort Künstler’s CommentsI painted The Fighting 69th because so many people asked for it. In 1991, I accepted a commission from the U.S. Army War Co...
View full detailsEve of Battle, The - by Mort Kunstler
Historical Information On June 30, the eve of the battle of Gettysburg, General John Buford (walking in front of the Gettysburg Seminary) contempla...
View full detailsEmancipation Proclamation, The - By Mort Kunstler
Historical InformationLincoln’s cabinet members were the only witnesses when the president signed into law the Emancipation Proclamation on New Yea...
View full detailsCol. Robert Shaw and the 54th Massachusetts by Mort Kunster
Historical InformationThe 54th Massachusetts Infantry was the first volunteer black regiment raised in the North. The ranks were filled with former...
View full detailsChamberlain and the 20th Maine By Mort Kunstler
Historical Information:It was a march to glory.At twilight on July 1, 1863, Colonel Joshua L. Chamberlain and the troops of the 20th Maine set out ...
View full detailsBeginnings in New Salem, The - by Mort Kunstler
Historical Information Several members of the Lincoln family in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley headed west to find a new life in the expanding nation...
View full detailsAmerican Hero, An by Mort Kunstler
Lt. Col. Joshua L. Chamberlain He went from modest New England professor to inspiring Union general. Joshua Chamberlain felt, as did millions of o...
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