Price: $
2,100.00
USD..
or 3 equal layaway payments in store, with a credit card of $700.00 over 60 days.
Virgil Ross Hooked on Tweety Hand-Painted Limited Edition Cel is eligible for 3 equal layaway payments in store, with a credit card of $700.00 over 60 days.
As an option you may also pay for Virgil Ross Hooked on Tweety
Hand-Painted Limited Edition Cel
using Paypal or with your Amazon Account(*select items). Please note that all orders must be delivered to a physical address verified by Paypal or Amazon. .
Hooked on Tweety - VR1710
NOTES: Classic animator, Virgil Ross, who is best known for his distinctive style, character personality and fluid animation, recreates the true sense of animation in this multiple image limited edition series entitled, the ΕSequential Series.Β This art was inspired by the 1949 Warner Bros. cartoon, ΕBad Ol Puddy Tat.Β In this image, Tweety attempts to escape Sylvester by sliding down a clothes line. Finding that the line is attached to Sylvesters tooth, he figures out a way to foil the smug Sylvester out of an early lunch. This edition was created from original Virgil Ross pencil drawings, the edition is hand-inked, hand painted and individually number in an edition size of 500 with 50 artists proofs. Backgrounds are lithograph printed on museum quality stock. Each piece is hand-signed by Virgil Ross..
Hooked on Tweety Hand-Painted Limited Edition Cel by Virgil Ross
image Copyright © 2024 by Virgil Ross
Virgil Ross began his animation career in 1920 with Winkler Studios in the late 1920s, then went on to Ub Iwerks, where he rose from the rank of in-betweener to animator and worked with Tex Avery. In 1935, Ross and Avery left Ub Iwerks and joined Warner Bros. Ross and Avery created the first Bugs Bunny animated short, "A Wild Hare" in 1940, which brought Bugs his first Oscar nomination. After stints with other Warner Bros. directors such as Chuck Jones and Bob Clampett, Ross, in 1942, began a long career with Friz Freleng s unit, where he animated over 230 cartoons, many of which were nominated for Oscars. In fact, four Ross-animated cartoons won Oscars - "Tweety Pie" (1947), "Speedy Gonzales" (1955), "Birds Anonymous" (1957), and "Knighty Knight Bugs" (1958). "Knighty Knight Bugs" was Bugs Bunny s only Oscar-winning performance. Known for bringing personality into the characters he animated, Ross style is said to be one of the finest examples of personality animation in the world. Ross, who died in 1996, had said his favorite animation effort was "Rhapsody Rabbit," in which he played some of the cartoon s classical music and honky-tonk tunes.