![]() ![]() In addition to jackets, like actor Jimmy Stewart’s, readers will find jackets and portraits of pilots, radio operators, Women Airforce Service Pilots, and even a member of the original unit that dropped supplies behind enemy lines. Slemp photographed over 160 A-2 jackets for the project, including jackets from the National Museum of the United States Air Force, the 390th Memorial Museum, 475th Fighter Group Museum, Allen Airways Flying Museum, Indiana Military Museum, The Air Zoo Aerospace & Science Museum, Lowndes County Historical Society Museum, March Field Air Museum, Minnesota Historical Society, National Naval Aviation Museum, San Diego Air & Space Museum, and the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum. Additionally, 37 jackets are from private collections that can only be seen in this book. As we were leaving, she pulled me aside and said in a quivering voice, ‘You have no idea what this means to me.’ It was a telling moment and has provided continuing incentive to bring the work to fruition.” To illustrate that point is the case of the daughter of a WWII flyer who, during an early exhibition of the work, stood in front of a print of her dad’s jacket for almost two hours. The emotion these jackets engender has been nothing short of astounding. ![]() Initially, I was drawn to the artwork and symbology, but as I more fully understood their cultural and historical implications, I became more engaged. I began to realize that the jackets were mobile signposts reflecting the distinct mortal challenges every flyer faced. “As the number of jackets photographed grew, the stories of their owners began to weigh more heavily on my mind. Yet, that’s precisely what happened after I began photographing A–2 flight jackets in 2014,” stated Slemp. “I’m not sure anyone ever sits down and consciously decides to write a book about the leather jackets worn by American aircrew during World War II. The coffee-table book captures the imaginations of those unfamiliar with this seldom seen genre of military folk art.The highly individualistic art depicted on World War II bomber jackets continues to fascinate, educate, and entertain to this day. Painted on the back of leather A-2 work jackets, these collectibles depict the attitudes of young airmen subjected to the vagaries of modern warfare in the sky, the successes, failures, and eventual triumphs of surviving 35 missions over stubbornly defended enemy territory. Army Air Corps A-2 Jacketsīomber Boys – WWII Flight Jacket Art by John Slemp is the most comprehensive visual record of A-2 jackets ever produced. Slemp, an award-winning photographer, has captured, in archival quality, the tactile beauty of the leather and the artwork that adorns the jackets. Over 100 jackets representing all World War II theaters, from both museums and private owners, plus artifacts and personal accounts, reveal a visual diary of men’s service in the U.S. The most comprehensive visual record of U.S.
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