Order Enquiries (UK) : 01436 820269

You currently have no items in your basket


Buy with confidence and security!
Publishing historical art since 1985

Don't Miss Any Special Deals - Sign Up To Our Newsletter!
Aircraft
Search
Signature
Search
Squadron
Search
Ship
Search
ORIGINAL
PAINTINGS
SEE THIS MONTH'S SPECIAL OFFERS
Product Search         
CLICK HERE FOR A FULL LIST OF ALL IVAN BERRYMAN PRINTS BY TITLE
ALWAYS GREAT OFFERS :
20% FURTHER PRICE REDUCTIONS ON HUNDREDS OF LIMITED EDITION ART PRINTS
BUY ONE GET ONE HALF PRICE ON THOUSANDS OF PAINTINGS AND PRINTS
FOR MORE OFFERS SIGN UP TO OUR FREE NEWSLETTER

World War One German Aircraft


Ivan Berryman Art Aviation Art German Air Force World War One

[UP] - World War One - Me109 - Me262 - Fw190 - Ju87 Stuka - Me110 - Do17 - He111 - Do335 - He177 - Ju287 - Me410 - Fw200 - He115 - Ar196 - Ar234 - Me163 - Hs129 - Ta152

First World War German aviation art prints by aviation artist Ivan Berryman.  Gallery of WW1 German aviation art featuring every print and painting of WW1 German aircraft by artist Ivan Berryman.

More Pages :
Albatros - Fokker D.II - Fokker D.VII - Fokker Dr.I - Fokker E.I - Fokker E.II - Fokker E.III - Fokker E.IV - Fokker E.V - Fokker F.I - AEG G.IV - AGO C.I - Aviatik B.1 - Aviatik D.1 - Brandenburg D.1 - Friedrichshafen FF.33 - Gotha - Halberstadt D.III - Halberstadt D.V - Hansa Brandenburg W.12 - Junkers J.1 - Lloyd C.V - LVG - Otto Pusher - Pfalz D.III - Roland C.II - Roland D.VI - Rumpler 6.B - Siemens-Schuckert D.IV - Taube - Zeppelin - Zeppelin-Staaken R.VI


Navigation
Page 2 of 5Previous .. Page 2 .. Next


Rittmeister Karl Bolle by Ivan Berryman.


Rittmeister Karl Bolle by Ivan Berryman.
7 of 8 editions available.
£2.70 - £500.00

Leutnant Hans von Keudell by Ivan Berryman.


Leutnant Hans von Keudell by Ivan Berryman.
6 of 7 editions available.
£2.70 - £500.00

Hansa Brandenburg W.12 - Attack on the C.17 by Ivan Berryman.


Hansa Brandenburg W.12 - Attack on the C.17 by Ivan Berryman.
9 editions.
£2.70 - £2000.00


AGO C.1 by Ivan Berryman.


AGO C.1 by Ivan Berryman.
9 editions.
£2.70 - £2900.00

Oswald Boelcke by Ivan Berryman.


Oswald Boelcke by Ivan Berryman.
9 of 10 editions available.
All 2 editions featuring an additional signature are available.
£2.70 - £1480.00

Etrich Taube by Ivan Berryman.


Etrich Taube by Ivan Berryman.
7 of 8 editions available.
£2.70 - £500.00


Zeppelin Gunners by Ivan Berryman.


Zeppelin Gunners by Ivan Berryman.
8 of 9 editions available.
£2.70 - £500.00

Oberleutnant Otto Kissenberth by Ivan Berryman.


Oberleutnant Otto Kissenberth by Ivan Berryman.
6 of 7 editions available.
£2.70 - £500.00

Gotha UWD by Ivan Berryman.


Gotha UWD by Ivan Berryman.
9 editions.
£2.70 - £3400.00


Tribute to Ludwig 'Lutz' Beckmann by Ivan Berryman.


Tribute to Ludwig 'Lutz' Beckmann by Ivan Berryman.
8 editions.
£2.70 - £1100.00

Ltn Fritz Kempf by Ivan Berryman.


Ltn Fritz Kempf by Ivan Berryman.
7 of 8 editions available.
£2.70 - £500.00

Kurt von Crailsheim by Ivan Berryman.


Kurt von Crailsheim by Ivan Berryman.
7 of 8 editions available.
£2.70 - £500.00


Leutnant der Reserve Erwin Bohme by Ivan Berryman.


Leutnant der Reserve Erwin Bohme by Ivan Berryman.
8 of 9 editions available.
£2.70 - £500.00

Oberleutnant Oskar Freiherr von Boenigk by Ivan Berryman.


Oberleutnant Oskar Freiherr von Boenigk by Ivan Berryman.
8 of 9 editions available.
£2.70 - £500.00

Leutnant Josef Jacobs by Ivan Berryman.


Leutnant Josef Jacobs by Ivan Berryman.
7 of 8 editions available.
£2.70 - £500.00


One in the Bag by Ivan Berryman


One in the Bag by Ivan Berryman
7 of 8 editions available.
£2.70 - £500.00

Leutnant Paul Baumer by Ivan Berryman.


Leutnant Paul Baumer by Ivan Berryman.
7 of 8 editions available.
£2.70 - £500.00

Looking for Business, March 1918 by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Looking for Business, March 1918 by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
One edition.
£2.70


Tribute to Julius Buckler by Ivan Berryman.


Tribute to Julius Buckler by Ivan Berryman.
7 editions.
£2.70 - £1100.00

Major William Barker VC, DSO - Nearly an Ace in a Day by Ivan Berryman.


Major William Barker VC, DSO - Nearly an Ace in a Day by Ivan Berryman.
7 of 9 editions available.
£2.70 - £500.00

Last But One by Ivan Berryman.


Last But One by Ivan Berryman.
7 editions.
£2.70 - £1100.00


Navigation
Page 2 of 5Previous .. Page 2 .. Next



Text for the above items :

Rittmeister Karl Bolle by Ivan Berryman.

Formidable commander of Jasta Boelcke, Karl Bolle, breaks off the attack on a 73 Sqn Sopwith Camel as its fuel tank begins to ignite - another undeniable victory in a career which saw him take an eventual 36 confirmed kills. The yellow band on the fuselage paid homage to his former unit, flanked by the black and white Prussian stripes Bolles Fokker DR.1 also sported an Oigee telescopic gunsight mounted between the guns. he survived two World Wars and died in Berlin in 1955.


Leutnant Hans von Keudell by Ivan Berryman.

An early star of Jasta 1, von Keudell is depicted here in his Halberstadt D.III, (instantly identifiable by his initial K on the fuselage side) as he drifts into position to exploit the blindspot of a Vickers Gunbus, late in the day in 1916. Von Keudells closing tally was 11 confirmed victories, but a possible 12.


Hansa Brandenburg W.12 - Attack on the C.17 by Ivan Berryman.

On the morning of 21st April 1917, coastal airship No C.17 was on a routine patrol captained by Sub Lieutenant E G O Jackson, when sometime around 8.00am, she was attacked by German seaplanes and shot down. Such was their vulnerability that these huge battlebags were an easy target for marauding enemy scouts, their single Lewis guns achieving little by way of defence. The Hansa Brandenburg W.12, on the other hand, was a nimble and useful aircraft that the Germans put to good use in the coastal defence role.


AGO C.1 by Ivan Berryman.

At the outbreak of World War 1, AGO Flugzeugwerke GmbH had not endeared itself to the architects of the German war machine due to the flimsiness of some of its designs, coupled with poor workmanship. When the C.1 first appeared in 1915, it attracted little interest and yet went on to prove itself to be a robust and useful aircraft, its pusher design dispensing with the now traditional open framework to support the tail in favour of twin streamlined tailbooms. The observer / gunner in the nose enjoyed an unrivalled field of view, although the engines position immediately behind the pilot was always a concern in the event of a crash. This aircraft, LF181, transferred from the Fliegertrouppe to the navy in 1915 and was based at Nieuwmunster, shown here in an exchange with an FE.2b in the skies over Belgium.


Oswald Boelcke by Ivan Berryman.

Hauptmann Oswald Boelcke was a shining example of everything that a fighter pilot should be, but his real legacy was his set of rules - Dicta Boelcke - that he devised for air combat, outlining techniques and tactics that became the standard for many generations of fighter pilots to come. He is shown in the aircraft in which he lost his life on 28th October 1916 when his all-black Albatross D.I was involved in a collision with his own wingman. Boelckes final tally was 40 victories.


Etrich Taube by Ivan Berryman.

The extraordinary Taube (or Dove) was extensively used by the Germans as a reliable, stable observation and reconnaissance aircraft as late as 1916, despite its archaic appearance. The Taube type first flew in Austria in 1909, the brainchild of Dr Igo Etrich and employed the early method of directional control known as differential wing-warping, instead of possessing ailerons and elevators. This version was powered by a Mercedes 6-cylinder inline engine and is a two-seat variant, much favoured by the Germans.


Zeppelin Gunners by Ivan Berryman.

Droning over the coast en route to another night attack on mainland Britain, the Zeppelins top gun platform goes into action as BE.2 fighters wheel around the gas-filled giants, trying desperately to fire their Brock, Pomeroy and Sparklet ammunition into the volatile gasbags that lay beneath the Zeppelins skin. Often freezing cold, always vulnerable, the defensive gunners occupied a tiny, sunken recess on the very top of the airship, shielded from the buffeting winds only by a shallow screen and their thick leather flying suits. Just a handrail and a shallow step lay between them and a vertiginous drop over the rolling sides of their massive craft. Their air-cooled Parabellum MG.14 machine guns did little to repulse their attackers, whilst the great Zeppelins offered themselves as huge, bloated targets for ground artillery as well as the brave pilots of the RFC.


Oberleutnant Otto Kissenberth by Ivan Berryman.

When pilots took off from the respective airfields in the 1914/18 war, they would rarely know what lay ahead. For Otto Kissenberth, the 12th October 1916 was to be a baptism of fire. Flying Fokker D.II 540/16, he scored his first three victories in quick succession, shooting down two Maurice Farmans and a Breguet V, as shown here. Unusual among fighter pilots of the time for the simple reason that he wore spectacles, Kissenberth went on to score an eventual 20 victories and survived the war, only to be killed whilst mountaineering in 1919.


Gotha UWD by Ivan Berryman.

In response to a German Navy requirement for a floatplane version of their successful G.1 bomber, Gotha produced just one example of the Ursinus Wasser Doppeldecker, or UWD. The aircraft proved to be easy to fly with good take off and landing characteristics and was capable of carrying a considerable payload. On an unknown date in 1916, the UWD took part in a raid on Dover with four Friedrichshafen FF.33s, inflicting some damage to military installations in the area and returning safely. Despite this, Gotha UWD no 120/15 was written off by the navy early in October that same year. No further examples were built.


Tribute to Ludwig 'Lutz' Beckmann by Ivan Berryman.

Lutz Beckmann joined Jasta 6 in December 1917, transferring to Jasta 48 then Jasta 56 in March 1918 before scoring his first victory. By the end of the war he had scored 8 victories - he is shown here in his colourful Fokker D.VII in September 1918. In World War Two he was awarded the Knight's Cross while commanding a unit flying the Junkers Ju52. He died in 1965.


Ltn Fritz Kempf by Ivan Berryman.

The Fokker DR.1 Triplane (213/17) of Fritz Kempf swoops on a pair of unsuspecting Sopwith Camels whilst on patrol over the Western Front in 1917. Kempfs practise of having his name painted across the top wing of his aircraft was supplemented by the taunt Do You Remember Me? on the mid wing. His aircraft is depicted in the colours worn by Jasta Boelcke of the Imperial Air Service.


Kurt von Crailsheim by Ivan Berryman.

The Fokker E II of Leutnant Kurt Freiherr von Crailsheim of FFA 53 is shown in formation with his wingman in a similar aircraft. Von Crailsheims aircraft bears his personalised markings of yellow, black and white diagonal bars on the fuselage, thought to represent his Military Merit Medal combined with the black and white of Prussia. The cross on the fuselage sides was applied in an unusually forward position. FFA 53 was based at Monthois late in 1915 and it was from this location that von Crailsheim made his final flight in this aircraft on 30th December.


Leutnant der Reserve Erwin Bohme by Ivan Berryman.

Albatros C.III C.766/16 was among the most distinctively-painted aircraft of World War 1, its fuselage sides decorated with a dragon motif on the starboard side and a stylised crocodile on the other, both apparently chasing a tiny white biplane. This was the aircraft shared by Erwin Bohme and his observer, Leutnant Ladermacher while serving with Jasta 10 on the Eastern Front in August 1916. Bohme was soon chosen to fly with the great Oswald Boelke with Jasta 2, the latter being tragically killed in a collision with Bohme on 28th October during an aerial combat with DH.2s of 24 Sqn. This tragedy haunted Bohme for many months to come, but he went on to score 24 confirmed victories before falling victim to an FK.8 on 29th September 1917. Their Albatros C.III is shown picking off a Russian Nieuport 12, his first kill on 2nd August 1916.


Oberleutnant Oskar Freiherr von Boenigk by Ivan Berryman.

Opening his victory tally by shooting down a Sopwith Camel in July 1917, von Boenigk proved himself to be a fine airman and a keen marksman by claiming a further five enemy aircraft by the end of that year. He continued to score steadily until the wars end, being credited with an eventual 26 kills. He went on to serve in the Luftwaffe during World War II, attaining the rank of Major-General, but was taken prisoner by the Russians in 1945 and died in captivity the following year. He is shown here in Pfalz D.III 1936/17 whilst serving with Jasta 4, whose aircraft were immediately recognisable by the black spiral ribbon applied to their fuselages. Von Boenigk is believed to have scored seven of his victories in this machine.


Leutnant Josef Jacobs by Ivan Berryman.

Germays greatest exponent of the Fokker Dr1 Triplane, Leutnant Josef Jacobs is depicted chatting with colleagues of Jasta 7 before a sortie in the spring of 1918. His black Triplane became well known to allied pilots, not least because of his formidable kill rate. By the end of the war, still aged just 24, Jacobs had claimed 48 enemy aircraft destroyed. The unusual practice of applying the black cross to the upper sides of the lower wings was to counter friendly fire from other German aircraft who frequently mistook the Dr1 for a Sopwith Triplane.


One in the Bag by Ivan Berryman

A German Albatross D-III sees off a Bristol Fighter among the clouds over the Western Front, early in 1917. The D-III was a massive improvement over the monoplanes of the time, possessing greater manoeuvrability, a higher ceiling and synchronized guns. Many German aces thought this the best fighter of the First World War.


Leutnant Paul Baumer by Ivan Berryman.

Shown in the colours of Jasta Boelke and carrying Baumers personal red / white / black flash on the fuselage, Fokker DR.1 204/17 was the aircraft in which he scored many of his 43 victories. Although the Sopwith Triplane had been withdrawn from service, German pilots frequently found their DR.1s being mistakenly attacked by their own flak batteries and, sometimes, by other pilots. For this reason, in march 1918, Baumers aircraft bore additional crosses on the centre of the tailplane and on the lower wings to aid identification. For some reason, his rudder displayed what appeared to be an incomplete border to the national marking. Nicknamed Der Eiserne Adler -The Iron Eagle - Paul Baumer survived the war, but died in a flying accident near Copenhagen whilst testing the Rohrbach Rofix fighter. He is shown in action having just downed an RE.8 while, above him, Leutnant Otto Lofflers DR.1 190/17 banks into the sun to begin another attack.


Looking for Business, March 1918 by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Arguably the best known of all World War 1 fighter aces, Mannfred von Richthofen, the 'Red Baron', is depicted here flying Fokker Dr.1, serial No 425/17, in its final livery following the introduction of the Balkenkreuze, early in 1918. Contrary to popular belief, this was the only Triplane flown by the Rittmeister that was painted all red and was also the aircraft in which he lost his life on 21st April 1918, the celebrated ace having scored a confirmed 80 victories against allied aircraft over France. His brother, Lothar von Richthofen, also flew with Jasta 11 and his aircraft can be seen close by with the all-yellow rear fuselage. Pilots of von Richthofen's 'Flying Circus' were permitted to paint their aircraft in their own personal colours, provided that they retained the red cowl, struts and wheel covers that denoted Jasta 11.


Tribute to Julius Buckler by Ivan Berryman.

Having been wounded early in World War One as a soldier on the Western Front, Julius Buckler had become a pilot with Jasta 17 by November 1916. He scored his first victory that December, one of almost 30 enemy aircraft. Frequently out of action due to wounds including simultaneous broken arms, he is seen here flying his Albatros D.III names Mops, the aircraft he used to claim his first balloon victory on 26th April 1917. He went on to score 7 balloon victories and was awarded the Blue Max. He died in 1960 aged 66.


Major William Barker VC, DSO - Nearly an Ace in a Day by Ivan Berryman.

Flying Sopwith Snipe E8102 on 27th October 1918, Major William Barker encountered a flight of fifteen Fokker D.VIIs and decided to take them on single handed. Having downed one enemy aircraft, Barker was wounded in his left thigh and momentarily fainted. Coming to, he found another D.VII ahead of him and immediately resumed the battle. Another bullet now tore into his right leg and another shattered his left elbow. Despite his terrible injuries, Barker shot down three D.VIIs and drove the others off before crash landing his bullet-riddled Snipe in friendly territory. He survived the crash and was awarded the VC for his gallantry on this epic flight.


Last But One by Ivan Berryman.

In the skies just west of Amiens on 20th April 1918, the celebrated German ace, Manfred von Richthofen, the Red Baron, flying his famous all-red Fokker DR.1 Triplane 425/17 and accompanied by other DR.1s of his notorious Flying Circus, encountered Sopwith Camels of No.3 and No.201 Squadrons and a fierce aerial battle ensued. Two Sopwith Camels were to fall to the Red Baron's guns that day, the first of them being Major Richard Raymond-Barker, shown here flicking his aircraft to the right to avoid the German's fire. Raymond-Barker was almost immediately shot down, his burning aircraft being consumed by fire on impact. Just minutes later, Second Lieutenant David Lewis was caught and despatched, these two British scouts being the last ever victims of Baron von Richthofen.

Contact Details
Shipping Info
Terms and Conditions
Cookie Policy
Privacy Policy

Join us on Facebook!

Sign Up To Our Newsletter!

Stay up to date with all our latest offers, deals and events as well as new releases and exclusive subscriber content!

This website is owned by Cranston Fine Arts.  Torwood House, Torwoodhill Road, Rhu, Helensburgh, Scotland, G848LE

Contact: Tel: (+44) (0) 1436 820269.  Email: cranstonorders -at- outlook.com

Follow us on Twitter!

Return to Home Page