(AFTER) George Schreiber titled Mississippi Moon vintage oil on board, unsigned and ready to hang
In good vintage condition with a very small pinhole in the top center that is not noticeable when hang, refer to last picture. Some nicks on the frame as well. Sold as found .
Actual artwork is 20"X16"
Please See Photos For True Condition 
Shipped with USPS First Class Package.
Handsome southern gothic design. 
Please browse the gallery to see our inventory. 
 
Just Gorgeous!  
Please refer to photos for more details on markings, size and condition. All weights, measurements and colors are approximate and may vary slightly from the listed dimensions or as seen in the image. 
All pictures are magnified to show the smallest of details. Please, refer to the item description for actual weight and size evaluation. 
 
Shipped with USPS First Class Package or FedEx . Hawaii, Alaska and Puerto Rico extra (please contact us)- Z51 
For PayPal and credit card users: we will ship only to confirmed addresses. 
Thank you for looking and let us know if you have any questions! 
Check out the rest of our scary Halloween items!

BIO:
When talented Georges Schreiber came to the United States from his native Belgium he was so grateful to this country for the opportunities offered him that he traveled into each of the 48 states on the monumental task of recording in 48 paintings his impressions of each of the states. These pictures were exhibited for the first time and received the highest acclaim from critics. “Mississippi Moon,” Schreiber’s record of the gracious and quiet mood of the South, was included in that showing and was the first choice of visitors for Popular Prize of the Exhibition.
It was acquired by Mr. and Mrs. Huntington Sheldon for their extensive collection of American art. 
Schreiber is now considered a completely American artist — in fact, the Treasury Department selected three of his paintings as official posters for War Loan Drives. Winner of the Tuthill Prize of the International Exhibition of Water Colors at the Chicago Art Institute in 1932, Schreiber has taken rapid strides to reach the highest rank in water colors as well as in oil painting. He has achieved recognition of our museums and his paintings are now included in collections of the Whitney Museum, the Metropolitan Museum, Sheldon Swope Art Gallery, Syracuse Museum, Brooklyn Museum, Museum of the City of New York, and the Collection of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Author of “Portraits and Self-Portraits,” Schreiber caught American public characters in rapid sketches, and he is the artist who executed the magnificent illustrations for “Little Man, What Now.”