ACE CAFE RADIO

    samedi 28 décembre 2013

    Land Rover by Studio Job: Birthday cake on wheels


    Land Rover Defenders are frequently endowed with additional features, designed for a specific purpose, such as snorkels for wading or bullbars for intimidating. But nothing will prepare you for the artistic addenda that Studio Job applied to this example...
    Formed in 2000 by a pair of Antwerp-based graduates, Studio Job has gained fame in art and design circles, partnering with the likes of Bulgari, L’Oreal and Swarovski. For its latest collaborative project, the studio was given a Land Rover Defender in order to create a 65th anniversary tribute to the pensionable workhorse. Land Rover’s only condition was that it remained ‘drivable’ - a line which was toed with as much leeway as possible, as you can see.

    Opulence, intricacy and irony

    Studio Job has become known for its “high levels of craftsmanship with extreme ornamentation”, with a calling card of “opulence, intricacy and irony”. The Defender employs flourishes of each: the bonnet-mounted globe and comically oversized wing-mirrors are inlaid with Swarovski crystals; the windows are replaced with stained glass; and one of the headlights has been supplanted by a candle, giving only minimal night-time illumination. The implementation of ironic imagery is perhaps the most interesting, a good example being the hand-beaten aluminium tongue protruding from the grille. “The numerous elements kept accumulating,” says Job Smeets, co-founder of the studio. “The car literally sticks its tongue out. It wants to be something that it actually isn’t. It’s become a great concoction, monumental and cynical. But isn’t that also true for power and class structures?”

    Popemobile for an African chief

    Along with several geographical references (the United States Capitol and Roman Colosseum each decorate one wheel), the Studio Job Defender also pays homage to African culture. “I imagine this car as a Popemobile for an African chief, personalised in a bizarre way,” says Smeets. "It's a caricature of a status symbol.” As a result, you’ll find that one of the chunky wheels has been replaced with a simple cartwheel, while flags of Zimbabwe and the Congo 'fly' from the bumper-mounted poles. Inside, seat and curtain fabrics - look closely and you’ll see various car parts among the African imagery - have been provided by Vlisco, a company which provides exclusive materials to wealthy Africans. Meanwhile, a gilded rhino tusk sculpture sits proudly on the bonnet.
    One of the car’s purposes is to launch an “unsubtle protest” at the lack of imagination in today’s car industry. “We didn’t want this to be a simple styling task - there are better people for that than us,” says Smeets. The result might be harder to swallow for Defender devotees than the wheel-mounted ‘sex cake’, but the crazy Dutch duo certainly represents a more interesting design force than Victoria Beckham.
    Photos: R. Rezvani (black Defender, photographed March 2013 during ‘making of’) and Zero40 (white Defender, photographed November 2013. Now Studio Job is planning to papier-mâché the entire car...) for Studio Job.
    A selection of slightly more discreet Land Rover Defenders can be found in the Classic Driver Market.

    Automotive milk bath: The sinking Beetle of Ivan Puig


    Milk makes you beautiful - as Cleopatra well knew, when she bathed daily in fresh ass's milk. But whether this approach works for automobiles, we're rather less certain...
    The Mexico-based artist Ivan Puig clearly felt it a good idea, however - and sent a VW Beetle to the spa. Whether it emerged as a Porsche 911 is not known. 
    More details at ivanpuig.net.

    grand ménage

    vendredi 27 décembre 2013

    Auction highlight from RM in Arizona: Ferrari 250 GT LWB California Spider


    1958 Ferrari 250 GT LWB California Spider
    RM's traditional start to the year in Arizona, this time taking place on 16 and 17 January, includes a further highlight in the form of a 1958 Ferrari 250 GT LWB California Spider, which it's hoped will sell for between $7m and $9m...
    1958 Ferrari 250 GT LWB California Spider
    The Porsche 718 RS 61 Spyder and 906 Carrera (recently covered in Classic Driver) are just the start of the blue-chip classics earmarked for the RM Auctions sale. Held in Phoenix, at the Arizona Biltmore Resort & Spa, the mid-January auction is traditionally RM's annual start to the season, and there are once again plenty of gems among the 120 hand-picked lots. Perhaps the highlight of the entire sale, however, is this just-announced Ferrari, chassis 1055 GT. The 11th built of only 50 Cal 'Spiders with the long wheelbase is a matching-numbers example, factory-fitted with closed headlights.
    Renowned importer Luigi Chinetti Motors originally supplied the Spider to Fawcett Motors in Lubbock, Texas, where the first owner, a local lawyer, bought the sports car. That was in 1959. In 1962, the Ferrari saw its only appearance in motorsport, with a first in class at the Osceola Grand Prix in Geneva, Florida - driven by Ross Durant. After a restoration in the nineties, the Ferrari won a trophy at the 1994 Cavallino Classic III Concours d'Elegance and later appeared at the Pebble Beach Concours. Recently, the Ferrari's engine was rebuilt at Roelofs Engineering in the Netherlands, while the car received a full service at Ferrari in Newport Beach. Hence chassis 1055 GT should be in exceptional condition.
    Photos: Patrick Ernzen - Courtesy of RM Auctions
    The car and all other lots in RM's Arizona auction can be found at rmauctions.com.