Posts Tagged ‘bmw’

MIssing In Action

Monday, February 6th, 2012

The artist known as MIA is pretty contro­versial. The Londoner with a Sri Lankan heritage has always polarised opinion, mixing up musical and creative influ­ences from every­where, and messing generally with the field of expect­a­tions and images.

The video below for her new single ‘bad girls’ is another provoc­ative edit of seemingly divergent images. This time try bad girls, street racers, and Kalashnikov-​​weilding insurgent-​​types for size.

Apparently shot in Morocco (though obviously evoking the more troubled environs of North Africa and the middle east), there’s an inter­esting inclusion of beemers and Alfas making use of the loose render of the dusty roads.

Not sure how we’re supposed to read this mad mashup of cultural forms. We dig it anyhow.

Oh, and she ‘upstaged’ Madonna at the Superbowl. What’s not to like?

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Crowe Customs

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

We came across Crowe Customs delightful document­ation of all things lathe-​​ish and metalspun while admiring Benji Wagner’s rather nice photoblog. Benji is a west coast photo­grapher and purveyor of fine outdoorsy type gear in the shape of the Poler brand, and he happens to be a mate of the Oregon custom bike builder.

Our favourite in his small collection of bikes is defin­itely the CB 750 with the Café treatment — we’re not sure if its derived from an original seventies 750 Four (the one with the four pipes all the way to the rear) or whether that lovely exhaust set up is a purely creative act.

Our growing crush on twin potted BMWs given scram­blerish makeovers continues too, though, with the work in progress documented here.

We have to admit that the online appeal of these passionate little outfits is bolstered by the relative quality of present­ation; both photo­graph­ically and in terms of the way their sites are built.

We think the talented Mr Wagner might have something to do with the former in the case of Crowe Customs.

Friday Car Crush #26

Friday, December 2nd, 2011

This week’s car crush is relat­ively attainable. Well, it might cost an arm and a leg, but at least the family driver could practically own one without causing too much jangling discord on the school run.

BMW aspir­a­tional mainstay receives a lot of flak by the Clarksonian brand of car crit. But we reckon this is simply because of its ubiquity; which is of course in turn based on its practical brilliance.

When Beemer unveiled the latest version, the CRT (standing for Carbon Race Technology), there wasn’t that much hoo-​​haa. But, despite that, it remains a little bit special.

The BMW M3 CRT embodies a concen­trated blend of state-​​of-​​the-​​art devel­opment expertise – inspired directly by motor sport – in the areas of drive system and chassis technology and intel­ligent light­weight design.

It also represents the worldwide debut of a new production process for carbon-​​fibre reinforced plastic (CFRP) components in the automotive industry. Its V8 engine has the customary M car’s high-​​revving charac­ter­istics and a maximum output of 331 kW/​450 hp. Pullaway from 0 to 100 km/​h is just 4.4 seconds.

This is because of its power to weight ratio is a stunning 3.5KG per horsepower. That means it’s nearly 70 KG lighter than the normal M3.

There’s only 67 of them to be made, and it’s expensive, but hey. It’s got four doors!

It’s the little detailing differ­ences that we really dig, however. There’s something dashingly, subtly assertive about it, and that’s why this particular M3 has got us looking into finance options. Perchance to dream.

BMW Spiccup

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

For some reason this incredible BMW one-​​off from 1969, (our favourite year), completely managed to pass us by these forty odd years.

You can see the car’s bloodline at first glance.

Yes, those are the Montréal–esque hooded headlamps from the pen of Marcello Gandini and the same shocking green rendering of Bertone’s audacious Alfa Carabo.

The Spicup was a Geneva launch and was based on the 2000CS — with the 2.8 litre straight six. It was sold after the show and appar­ently the car clocked over 100,000KM before its owner gave up and confined it to automotive legend.

It sold Recently at auction via Bonhams for around US$600K. That’s some serious mileage for such a valuable vehicle.

And though there’s a lot about it’s look and feel that is dead-​​on in terms of its period design, the side perspective gives a hint at where the ideas came from.

We reckon this was Gandini’s homage to 50s American futurism.

BMW by Sandro Chia

Tuesday, June 21st, 2011

We’ve blathered on at length here as to wether or not cars can ever be in and of themselves works of art — most people who care about cars — who are inter­ested in them at any kind of aesthetic level — will have an opinion.

Like most, it’s a debate that becomes more complex the deeper you delve.

When you commission a working artist to use a car as a blank page, there are bound to be inter­esting results. Often, though, the cars that have resulted from bearing the brush seem awkwardly rendered.

This isn’t the case with Sandro Chia’s E36 3 series GTR.

Chia has created a car that looks back at you. Those anonymous faces have a primitive quality — like those rendered by Picasso, who had been fascinated in the 1920s by so called ‘primitive’ art from Africa and the other colonies.

It’s the human­ising qualities that makes the car ‘work’ at an aesthetic level. Combine the sort of mechanical exactitude of an M3 with hi-​​end repres­ent­ation and you have something that is more than the sum of its parts.

We as a species may be little more than monkeys with a lot of brain power who have found ways to represent themselves as special. We adorn ourselves with bangles to prove our potency.

Is this the real reason we like shiny things like artfully created cars?

 

Autoerotica!

Friday, June 17th, 2011

Now we love our motors. And we love our HD video. And we love our soul music. But whoever is responsible for this webbified conjunction of three of our favourite things is either REALLY in love with these three things, or his tongue is placed firmly in his or her cheek.

Either way, we’ve just spent an enter­taining couple of minutes indulging ourselves in some old Beemer love. We suggest you do too!

Europe's Glory

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

Fiat Abarth 750 Zagato
Give a tiny Fiat chassis the Zagato bodywork treatment and a tuned engine and tweaked running gear from Mr Abarth. What more could you want from a pocket rocket for the fifties? Post war Italian austerity gets a shot in the arm, If you couldn’t afford Ferrari’s 250 TR – this was the bargain basement racer of its time.

 

Ferrari 250 TR
With a body by Scagietti and Ferrari’s race-​​focussed engin­eering, the TR was dominant in its various arenas and remains unassailable in its aesthetic appeal. This was the car that announced the true arrival of the prancing horse as a global force. Not surprising, then that the few on the market command as much dinero as a prime Picasso.

 

Mercedes 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupé
Benz’s head of motor­sport Rudolph Uhlenhaut bespoke two of these enclosed, gull-​​winged versions of the W 196 SLR for road use. Reputedly the fastest car on the planet in 1955, the coupé version of Moss’s record­breaking Mille Miglia winning car invokes the Ride of the Valkyries with a Gene Vincent backbeat. Scarily teutonic.

 

Maserati Tipo 61 ‘Birdcage’.
Unveiled with Stirling Moss at the helm in 1959, the Tipo 61 got its moniker because of its cage-​​like space-​​frame chassis — which was lighter and stiffer than its compet­itors at the time. We like it, though, because of its arachnid styling and the way its design exemplifies that moment when the fifties with its make-​​and-​​do feel of the ancien régime gave way to the self conscious modernism of the relat­ively affluent sixties. Lecture on social history over. Just look at it!

 

Jaguar XK SS
Contender for sexiest car of all time, let alone the fifties — this was the road-​​going version of the all conquering D Type racer – with a passenger seat, a door and a proper windscreen. Unseemingly curva­ceous and rare – due to a fire at the Jag plant – it remains a totemic road-​​going piece of British automotive crafts­manship. Steve McQueen and his XKSS were, appar­ently the focus of a free donut bonus scheme by the LAPD. The Coolest Man in the Universe and his ride would tool around the Hollywood Hills on the limit it seems…

 

Maserati A6 G
We’re repeating ourselves here a bit but we couldn’t leave this beauty out. The curved propor­tions of the coachwork combined with its laid-​​​​back, hunkered down poise get us in the back of the throat. Those tiny rear headlamps. The huge Maserati trident on the grille. The minimal brushed steel bumpers and the pertly curved boot! Those Webers! Those wire wheels! We’re STILL in love.

 

BMW 507
Originally intended for export to the US to compete with sporty and succesful Mercs and MGs, the 507’s pretty roadster lines live on in the Z-​​series of roadster. Never selling in numbers due to high costs they now fetch silly money. There’s only 200 or so in existence — and we doubt you can name a prettier German car.