Chesty Puller

Cold Cast bronze mounted on hardwood base, 12” x 7” x 6”.

Limited Edition 20

The quintessential Marine’s Marine. The most decorated Marine in American history. This piece is a tribute to the man and the legend.

Elizebeth Smith Friedman

Cast Bronze 26” 14” x 12”.

America’s first female codebreaker.  Her coat features over 2,400 embossed characters forming words describing her extraordinary life and accomplishments.  All of the words have been encrypted, requiring the viewer to study the piece in order to uncover Elizabeth’s life story.

During her lifetime, Elizebeth received very little recognition for her heroic contributions to national security. The time has come to honor her with this sculpture.

Fly Girl

Cold Cast Bronze, 27” × 16” × 11”
Limited edition of 12

 

“Fly Girl” is a tribute to the early icons of women’s aviation. Women who dared to jump into ramshackled open-air cockpit of single propeller planes in order to realize their dreams of flying. Airracing, barnstorming, stunt flying, all the while braving the way for other women to follow unconventional paths.

Franklin D. Roosevelt

Cast bronze, mounted on black marble, 26” x 19” x 12”.

32nd President of the United States. This life-size piece was a commissioned by Norfolk Southern Cooperation and was installed in March of 2015 on the Marco Polo, FDR’s presidential train which is permanently assigned to Track no. 7 at Union Station, Washington D.C.

Gloria Whitton Health

Cold Cast Bronze, 24 x 22 x 12.

Gloria Whitton Heath (May 7, 1922 – December 16, 2017) was an aviation pioneer and is regarded as one the most accomplished women of the 20th Century. After graduating from Smith College in 1943, Gloria was selected to serve as a Women Airforce Service Pilot (WASP) during World War II. When the war ended, the WASPs were disbanded, and at the age of 25, she became a founding member of the Flight Safety Foundation. Gloria’s lifelong passion for all things related to flying and flight safety fueled a long and illustrious career, in which she won numerous awards and honors. This sculpture captures Gloria’s effervescent personality and her enthusiasm for aviation. Her infectious smile reflects her love of flying and evokes a sense of excitement for the future. Historic photos to capture Gloria’s indomitable spirit and effervescent personality. The life-size bust took over 300 hours to complete. The Flight Safety Foundation is currently in discussions with the Smithsonian Institute to permanently display the Gloria Heath Trophy.

Silver Wings

Cast Bronze, 21″ x 13″ x 9″
Limited edition of 12

What drives someone to climb into the cockpit of a flying death trap to test dangerous aircraft that most men were afraid to fly? What drives someone to rebel against social convention and gender roles to risk their life for two thirds of the pay of their male counterparts?

Virginia Hall

Cast Bronze, life size, 23” x 18” x “12.

Known by the Gestapo as “the most dangerous of Allied spies”, this formidable “limping lady” and “woman of no importance” was unknown by her real name: Virginia Hall.