Certainly not German. - A work of British propaganda.
Is that so? Interesting. I came across that a while ago, and couldn't decide whether it was British, and meant to demonstrate that the Tank was invulnerable, or German, and meant to show that they weren't intimidated by this diabolical weapon.
-- Edited by James H on Friday 13th of July 2012 10:35:52 AM
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All it says on my copy of the picture is "Surrounded." Can't remember where I found it now. That makes it sound a bit more likely to be British than German, assuming, of course, that it's the original caption.
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"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.
... but no luck so far. Someone more familiar with tanks and the tank battles might be able to search more systematically from the clues in the picture. Lots of other great pictures to look at if not (though some will be familiar), and the German perspective to be gleaned.
The style, particularly of the figures, seems very like that of the very prolific illustrator, Fortunino Matania, and surely the tank is based very closely on a published photograph of a Mk 1 with damage to the right wheel.
Usually, Matania's illustations were signed, and often credited to him as he enjoyed a very considerable reputation. Some of his work seems very well researched and accurately drawn, although others show that he may have had limited access to photographic material, and made some interpretation which is not quite so precise.
Matania's wartime illustration work continued to be reproduced for some time after first publication, so a print may date from a later source.
Paper quality might give a clue, or any text which has not been cropped.
The style, particularly of the figures, seems very like that of the very prolific illustrator, Fortunino Matania, and surely the tank is based very closely on a published photograph of a Mk 1 with damage to the right wheel.
I googled the guy, and your assessment is spot on.
By the way, a few hours ago I stumbled upon a photo album from someone named Roger Hurkmans from Facebook (wonder if he's on this forum) who is making a very nice work based on this scene (even if in 1/35)
A very accomplished Dutch modeller, with many, mainly German content, dioramas. And many of award winning quality. Did a google and found an example of his finished work for those who may not of seen his work http://www.little-norway.org/forum/index.php?topic=395.45
Paul
Diego, do you have a link to the facebook page ?
-- Edited by Paul Bonnett on Monday 30th of July 2012 12:44:43 AM
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Just saw another photo album, by other modeller, with a 1/32 FT17 and some Amerikaners. Want me to start another thread with the link? Do many of the forumites have Facebook accounts?