Start cutting into the wrong car and you're likely to get hate mail from brand purists. When Jesse James' old Monster Garage show turned a fairly rare 1971 Chevy El Camino SS into a Figure 8 race car, the producers wouldn't tell the seller what their plans were for fear of queering the deal. Now Figure 8, being a step above demo derby, is admittedly not exactly a concours, but Chevy cowboy Cadillacs are not quite as rare as hens' teeth. There were 44,606 El Caminos produced in 1971. I remember something guitar dealer and trader George Gruhn said to me about $25,000 Fender Strats and $50,000 Gibson Les Pauls (paraphrased), "Remember, they were built in factories, on assembly lines, by Mexican American immigrant women, not by artisans like Cremona violins." Actually, carrying Mr. Gruen's remarks to their logical conclusion, it's worth noting that Amati, Stradivari and Guarneri themselves had workshops with craftsmen and apprentices working for them. A '58 Les Paul may not be a Stradivarius but then a Stradivarius isn't nearly as rare as a Shelby Daytona Coupe. Stradivari made over a thousand instruments. Rarity is a relative term until you get to one of one. So when I read about Hamburg, Germany gallery owner and artist Thomas Eigel and engineer Jürgen Ulmer cutting up irreplaceable 1960s vintage Ferrari 330GT and 365GT bodies to create wall hangings they call the Ferrari Project I was ambivalent.
On one hand, it's wrong to waste something. My zayde was a junkman who raised a family of five daughters and two nephews dealing in scrap paper and rags. On the other, I'm sure that while he occasionally brought home an unexpected find amidst the rags, it's quite likely that in his day to day business he bundled up and sold what would now be collectible and possibly valuable items of ephemera, without giving it a second thought. Every day recyclers smelt objects that have value beyond that of scrap. So it goes. "Ghost signs" are old advertisements painted on walls exposed when newer adjacent buildings are torn down, revealing the old ads once again. There's one for Champion Spark Plugs on Woodward near Seven Mile in Detroit. Since being exposed it's been gradually painted over by new ads. Part of me mourns the loss of some cool commercial art. The other part says that today's ads generate wealth and the Champion ad was no less commercial than they are, though, to be honest, I liked its aesthetics better than a knockoff Sponge Bob Squarepants hawking party rentals. Ultimately, though, the owner of property has the right to do whatever they want to do with it, even cut it up for the sake of art. Click here to view the embedded video. The Hamburg artists say that aesthetics is one of their motivations. Another is paying homage to Ferrari and to Pininfarina who designed those bodies. They say that many collectible cars are works of art that are too often hidden away in warehouses and garages.
Keeping with the focus on aesthetics and design, Eigel and Ulmer use only the body panels, leaving off any trim, lights, mirrors or wheels.
So why destroy a perfectly serviceable (and very valuable) car body? Ulmer says,
Perhaps there's more than a touch of modern art's fascination with the transgressive in the Ferrari Project but they do have a point. Mega car dealer, race team owner and noted car collector Rick Hendricks, when asked about resto-mods and "tribute" cars or clones of rare muscle cars getting serious money at auction, said that one reason is that the originals are just too valuable to drive and risk damage or destruction. Ken Lingenfelter has battery tenders on 99% of the cars in his collection just so that they can be driven regularly, but he admitted that a handful are so rare and essentially irreplaceable that they can't practically be driven on public roads. A Ferrari in storage may appreciate in monetary value but hardly anyone gets to appreciate it. Click here to view the embedded video. To their credit, the artists didn't cut up functioning cars. In both cases they tracked down bodies that had been removed from their production chassis and were just sitting collecting dust in storage, and recalling George Gruen's remark, neither car is ultra-rare. About 1,000 Ferrari 365GTs were made and about 1,100 330GTs were produced. Ulmer and Eigel have announced that they will be taking commissions for future wallhangings of specific models. It remains to be seen whether they'll recover other unused bodies, salvage panels from wrecks, or if they'll transgressively take a Sawzall to a Ferrari that was running when parked (or, if they'll work with other marques as their media). In any case, though, they are emulating Enzo Ferrari in the way they do business.
Speaking of prices, Ars may be Gratia Artis but something tells me that each Ferrari Project wall hanging will be priced significantly higher than 50% of the market value of each of those complete Ferrari bodies.
Ronnie Schreiber edits Cars In Depth, a realistic perspective on cars & car culture and the original 3D car site. If you found this post worthwhile, you can dig deeper at Cars In Depth. If the 3D thing freaks you out, don't worry, all the photo and video players in use at the site have mono options. Thanks – RJS from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com | |||
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Monday, April 9, 2012
What’s Wrong With This Picture? Ferraris For Art’s Sake Edition
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