Art Shows

Pegasus

October 21, 2019

For the 60th Annual Boone County Bank Art Show, the BRC founder submitted his “Pegasus Rising ” banjo to the autumn exhibit among over 200 paintings, sculptures, fiber, wood, and glass works. This creature from Greek mythology is the winged horse that heroic Bellerophon rode to defeat the monstrous Chimera.

During World War II, the image of Bellerophon astride Pegasus was adopted by the British paratrooper corps as their sleeve insignia. During the D-Day Invasion in 1944, the British 6th Airborne Division captured a vital French bridge near Caen amidst bitter fighting, and the span was forever renamed the Pegasus Bridge.

At the art show, the banjo garnered a ribbon and promptly sold as indicated by the red dot on the tag.

The British 16th Air Assault Brigade still wears the unchanged Pegasus sleeve insignia today, depicting a white steed and bold warrior on a field of crimson (below right).

A life long student of military history, the BRC founder crossed the English Channel in 1984 with a tour group of D-Day combat veterans inorder to share with them the 40th Anniversary of the Normandy Invasion. They walked the sands of Omaha Beach together and attended commemorative ceremonies at Pegasus Bridge.

One of the tour group members recounted piloting a LCVP (Higgins boat) during the desperate June 6th assault ferrying tense platoons of infantry through troubled seas to landing beaches raked with shot and shell. He had since lived a quiet life in Miami and was active in administrating the annual Orange Bowl parade and festivities. He gave the BRC founder a souvenir stick-on fabric orange blossom that has adorned the truss rod cover of the banjo builder`s favorite mandolin (below left) ever since.

Pegasus, a prominent constellation in the northern sky, is signified by a mother of pearl sun and star on the truss rod cover of the BRC banjo. This theme is repeated on the heel of the 5-stringer with a winged horse bracketed by the sun and moon, and this signature mother of pearl locus is for the eyes only of the musician.

You Might Also Like

No Comments

Leave a Reply