Monoplan M.S attaquant un LVG [Monoplane Morane-Saulnier (M.S.) attacking a Luftverkehrsgesellschaft (LVG)], Maurice Busset (1879–1936)
Artwork Overview
Maurice Busset, who studied art in Paris, began military service as an aerial scout in 1914. After the War he produced several portfolios about aerial warfare. His introductory text to this portfolio states:
“Between flights, in the cockpit of the twin motor. Under canvas hangars, winter evenings, under the glow of watchman’s lantern—these images were carved during the turbulent period of the Great War.
A block of cherry or beech, a steel knife, were companions who never abandoned the author in those years when the future no longer existed for the soldier. Without any hope of future publication, he had to prove to himself, that despite the leather jacket of the aviator he was still an artist.”
As fate would have it, Busset outlived his comrades and published this book of woodcuts-prints that celebrate flying machines as works of art in their own right.