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Don Mattingly Signed INS Farewell Last Yankee stadium HR litho Auto JSA /623
$ 316.79
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Description
Incredible Don Mattingly handlithograph of his final game ever at yankee stadium vs Seattle in game 2 1995 playoffs. Mattingly inscribed "The Captain's farewell, Last HR at Yankee Stadium 10/4/1995". Incredibly rare!! This litho depicts his last Home run at yankee stadium which was also his only post season HR EVER !!
Bill Purdom the artist has also signed this!! . Incredibly beautiful in person this is stunning!!! 18x24 approx in size donnies final game!!!! Limited edition /623 only and far less than that were signed by Mattingly! only a handful!!! This is JSA Certified with their sticker and matching cert card.
Bill Purdom one of greatest sports artist see below
WE HAVE A STORE FOR OVER 28 years cardboard memories commack Long Island New York 631 462 1919.
Bill Purdom BIO
William Scahill (Bill) Purdom was born in Charleston, West Virginia on October 27, 1953. He grew up in Wyoming, Ohio where by age 9 his artwork was attracting local attention. After Wyoming High School came Auburn University. He graduated in 1975 with a degree in visual design. The next 19 years were spent working and living in New York City. He started working at Whistl'n Dixie Studio where his art for Bloomingdales gained him international attention. This notoriety allowed him to become self-employed.
Used by every major advertising agency in New York, Bill has also illustrated billboards, movie posters, album covers and worked on national campaigns for Mercedes Benz, Nikon, Panasonic, American Express, and three major television networks. He was the first artist allowed by Steven Spielberg to paint the character “E.T.” (in a national campaign for McDonald's). While living in New York he was a major contributor to The New York Times and his work appeared in many magazines, among them Sports Illustrated, Newsweek, Fortune, Time, Esquire, Sport and National Lampoon. While living in the city, Bill was on the Board of Directors of the American Museum of Illustration and the Society of Illustrators.
After 12 years of award winning advertising and editorial illustration, Bill switched to the fine arts field. Since 1989 he has painted to date 78 great moments in baseball, including 10 first pitch paintings of the various new ballparks that have opened around the country. His baseball lithographs have been seen on the television show Seinfeld and the HBO series Arliss. His originals hang in private collections worldwide and lithographs of all 78 of his paintings are a part of the permanent collection of the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Bill has also done lithographs for the NBA, NFL, NHL, NCAA and thoroughbreds for the Saratoga Race Course.
In the last year Bill became the most prolific artist in the history of the Topps Co., Inc. To date he has painted 340 baseball, football and basketball cards with projects scheduled for the next several years. Bill is the only artist who has been officially licensed by Dale Earnhardt, Inc. to commemorate the fallen hero. On QVC, when presented on air his eighty card set telling the life story of Dale Earnhardt sold 18,000 units in 15 minutes. His stein celebrating the life of Dale Earnhardt completely sold out as did his framed lithograph of the great driver, which sold 54,000 units in 24 hours. Due to Bill's uncanny ability to capture likenesses, his portraits are highly sought and in great demand.
Most recently Bill was a technical adviser for Billy Crystal's Mantle and Maris movie “61”. On April 15, 2004, Major League Baseball, in an unprecedented combination of art appreciation and heritage celebration handed out 250,000 copies of Bill's painting of Jackie Robinson's first at bat to lucky fans in ball parks across America.
Cardboard Memories owner Scott Stimell has owned and operated a retail store for 20 years. Scott was recently featured on HBO Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel as well as on the Yes Network as an expert in Mickey Mantle and Ted Williams autographs, so you can rest assured you are buying the real thing.
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