Automobile Enthusiasts
Related: About this forumNashville exhibit of Art Deco autos and motorcycles
Wow -- what beauties! True works of art.
New Nashville exhibit showcases designs of art deco automobiles and motorcyclesBy Larry Printz
THE (HAMPTON ROADS, VA.) VIRGINIAN-PILOT
Saturday August 10, 2013 5:19 AM
If youve seen Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers dance in the 1936 film Swing Time or spent the night at a hotel in South Beach, or visited the Empire State Building, youve seen it: art deco design.
Its streamlining influenced every aspect of American life in the 1930s, from architecture and appliances to railroad cars and even automobiles. But while art deco successfully sold washing machines, radios and houses, it didnt prove overly popular with auto buyers. Cars that radically embraced the new look failed to sell, even though they influenced car design for decades.
Its that legacy thats examined in an exhibit, Sensuous Steel: Art Deco Automobiles at the Frist Center for the Visual Arts in Nashville, Tenn. The exhibit is scheduled to run through Sept. 15....
MORE at
http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/business/2013/08/10/art-deco.html
More pics from the show at: http://www.sportscardigest.com/sensuous-steel-art-deco-automobiles-photo-gallery/
Also
http://fristcenter.org/calendar-exhibitions/detail/sensuous-steel
http://www.visitmusiccity.com/sensuoussteel
http://www.roadandtrack.com/go/automotive-design/go-automotive-design-sensuous-steel-art-deco-automobiles
JohnnyRingo
(19,313 posts)I love the luxury cars from that era, especially those built by the French coach builders. Delahayes and Delages are some of the most sensuous automobiles ever taken from pen to sheet metal, yet remain almost unknown to most American car buffs. Even the mass produced French "People's Car", the lowly Citroen CV2s, don't have a straight line on them.
When I was young I had a ruler set that included something called a French Curve. I pondered the use for such a tool, but never actually had a reason to employ it. Much later in life when I saw my first Delage, those days in grade school all came rushing back to me as I saw those gracefully flowing curves caught in the sweeping fenders and body of a true work of art that just happened to have a steering wheel:
People often wonder how so many examples of these very low production cars are still in existence. The reason is that they were always coveted and maintained by their wealthy owners. Unlike many old muscle cars, these art deco era cars were never left in a field or even a dirty garage. They were kept in pristine condition and polished by caring chauffeurs from the time of purchase until they were sold at a premium or handed down to lucky heirs. During WWII these cars were even hidden away from the Nazi seige the same way Rembrandts were safely secreted away. Those that did fall into Axis hands were still preserved as spoils of war and most survive to this day.
theHandpuppet
(19,964 posts)Can you imagine cruising down the highway in that masterpiece?