“Hitting The Kwai” by Craig Kodera
Limited Edition Signed Print: 134/850
Published: Greenwich Workshop, 1997 SOLD OUT EDITION
Image Size: 26.125" x 20”
Selling Price: $350
About the Art: I've been researching this topic for years. I was drawn to the story after seeing that great D. Lean movie Bridge on the River Kwai. But I soon found out that the real story was even more incredible, and tragic. Some 16,000 American, Austratian, British and Dutch prisoners of war perished during the construction of the infamous "Death railway" that proivded the Japanese with an overland supply route from Bangkok to Burma. The bridges that conveyed the tracks to the river Kwae Noi were targets that had to be destroyed by the US Army Air forces. Again and again aircrews flew low through the intense anti-aircraft fire while trying to hit a target which resembled the thin edge of a knife blade. I am pleased, therefore, that a portion of the proceeds from the sale of his print will benefit the Kwai River Christian Mission in Thailand. C. Kodera
About the Artist: Craig Kodera has always loved aviation. Born in riverside, Calif., in 1956, he cannot remember a time when airplaines and flight were not part of his life. He was raised in what he calls an "aviation family," in a neighborhood very close to the Los Angeles Airport. Kodera started to paint at 14 and earned his private pilot's license at 16. He attended UCLA, earning a BA in Mass Communications and completing the equivalent of a minor in Art History. After granduation, he worked as a commerical artist for several small advertising and design firms, and for McDonnell Douglas Aircraft. There art and aviation merged, and Craig found himself employed as a production/design artist and illustrator.
Kodera spent more than seven years in the Air Force Reserve. He also served with the Strategic Air Command, stationed at the same air base where he flew the McDonnell Doughlas KC-10A Extender. He is a charter vice president of the American Society of Aviation Artists and he is a member of the Air Force Art Program and the Los Angeles Society of Illustrators. His work hangs in several museums and is part of the permanent collection of the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.