“Aviation
was my first
artistic
love,” says
William S.
Phillips,
“but my
true,
enduring
love remains
my Christian
faith, home
and family.
So it is my
pleasure to
combine all
of it in my
work. The
historical
aviation
subjects, I
research;
the
contemporary
and
nostalgic
subjects, I
live.”
Phillips
grew up
loving art
but never
thought he
could make
it his
livelihood.
At college
he majored
in
criminology,
and he had
been
accepted
into law
school when
four of his
paintings
were sold at
an airport
restaurant.
That was all
the
incentive he
needed to
begin his
work as a
fine art
painter.
Bill
Phillips is
now the
aviation
artist of
choice for
many
American
heroes and
the
nostalgic
landscape
artist of
choice for
many
collectors.
Bill’s
strengths as
a landscape
painter are
what gave
him an edge
in the
aviation
field:
respect and
reverence
for a time
and place.
When one
sees his
aviation
pieces,
thoughts are
about the
courageous
individuals
who risked
their lives
for our
freedom. In
Bill’s
nostalgic
works, the
viewer
understands
fully what
that freedom
is . . . the
precious
values that
make life
worth
living.
After
one of his
paintings
was
presented to
King Hussein
of Jordan,
Phillips was
commissioned
by the Royal
Jordanian
Air Force.
He developed
sixteen
major
paintings,
many of
which now
hang in the
Royal
Jordanian
Air Force
Museum in
Amman. The
Smithsonian
Institution’s
National Air
and Space
Museum
presented a
one-man show
of Phillips’
work in
1986; he is
one of only
a few
artists to
have been so
honored.
In
1988,
Phillips was
chosen to be
a U.S. Navy
combat
artist. For
his
outstanding
work, the
artist was
awarded the
Navy’s
Meritorious
Public
Service
Award and
the Air
Force
Sergeants
Association’s
Americanism
Medal. In
1991, three
of Phillips’
works were
chosen as
part of the
top 100 in
“Art for the
Parks,” the
prestigious
annual
fund-raiser
for the
National
Park
Service, and
one painting
received the
“Art History
Award” from
the National
Park
Foundation.