Friday, January 28, 2022

1963 Airstream Bambi Travel Trailer

Wally Byam was born on the Fourth of July in 1896 in Baker City, Oregon. He loved the outdoors and had a keen sense of wanderlust. But his wife did NOT. So in the late 1920s, he had the notion to attach a tent contraption on top of a Model T chassis, in order to provide her with some more comfort on their trips. He eventually built a proper trailer, and in 1931 opened the first Airstream trailer factory in California.



















The business survived the Great Depression and World War II, and business started to boom after the war. He pitched the trailers to the average person, "With no worry as to where you are going to stay or how the means are going to be when you get there . . . you have plenty of carefree time to see the sights instead of hurrying through them." He also led Airstream Caravans across the globe, traveling through Mexico and Central America, Europe, Canada, and from Cape Town, South Africa to Cairo, Egypt. The Airstream Caravans produced a group of owners who formed a club to maintain the friendships they'd made during the trips. In 1955, the first Airstream Club was founded.





This 1963 Bambi was the company's smallest model, a single-axle trailer roughly the same length as the average passenger car. Its areodynamic body is all lightweight aluminum. Byam had worked in the areonautics industry, and took inspiration from airplanes in designing the Airstream body.



 




Wally Byam promoted his Airstreams with a rather beautifully idealistic manifesto, which reads in part:

In the heart of these words is an entire life's dream. To those of you who find in the promise of these words your promise, I bequeath this creed . . . my dream belongs to you.

  • To place the great wide world at your doorstep for you who yearn to travel with all the comforts of home.
  • To keep alive and make real an enduring promise of high adventure and faraway lands . . . of rediscovering old places and new interests.
  • To open a whole world of new experiences . . . a new dimension in enjoyment where travel adventure and good fellowship are your constant companions.
  • To encourage clubs and rallies that provide an endless source of friendships, travel fun and personal expressions.
  • To lead caravans wherever the four winds blow . . . over twinkling boulevards, across trackless deserts . . . to the traveled and untraveled corners of the earth.
  • To play some part in promoting international goodwill and understanding among the peoples of the world through person-to-person contact.
  • To strive endlessly to stir the venturesome spirit that moves you to follow a rainbow to its end . . . and thus make your travel dreams come true.



This video gives a glimpse to the interior of an 1960s Airstream:





More history of Wally Byam and the Airstream: https://www.airstream.com/blog/the-creed/





Tuesday, January 25, 2022

Volkwagen Type-1 Beetle

 Almost through my series of MoMA Automania drawings.

The Volkswagen Beetle, along with its sibling, the VW microbus, is an icon of the 1960s Woodstock generation, and one of the most beloved cars ever made. In 1972, when the 15 millionth Type 1 was assembled, it surpassed the Ford Model T as the highest-selling car in history. It was quite the turnaround from some ignoble beginnings.

















In the mid-1930s, Adolf Hitler ordered German carmakers to develop an automobile for the common people. This 'people's car,' or 'volkswagen,' was to be mechanically simple, inexpensive to produce, fuel efficient, and capable of accommodating a family of two adults and three children. Its production would be subsidized by the state, and consumer purchasing would also be subsidized through a state-run savings plan. Along with the development of the Autobahn, the Volkswagen program was Hitler's initiative to promote automotive culture to the German people.



















In 1938, the first Volkswagen factory was built, however World War II delayed the launch of the car. After the war, the factory was turned over to the British. The factory began producing them for the occupying British Army, and they began to gain popularity throughout Europe, being faster and more fuel-efficient to other cars like the Citroën 2CV. It became known in Germany as the Käfer (German for "beetle"), the Coccinelle ("Ladybug") in France, and of course, the Beetle or Bug in America.



























It began to be imported to the United States in 1949, and while it was slow to catch on, it started to gain popularity by 1959 and exploding in popularity in the early sixties. It eventually became the longest-running and most-manufactured model car ever made, remaining in production until 2003 and producing 21,529,464 cars.
































History and Reference:

Hemmings: The Volkswagen Type 1 Beetle Marks Its 75th Anniversary

Thursday, January 13, 2022

1957 Lincoln Premiere

This car is NOT a part of the MoMA Automania exhibit. In fact, I had a day off from my museum job and went out looking to draw something OTHER than cars, but wound up finding this guy anyway.

















The Lincoln Premiere was produced between 1956 and 1960. It became Lincoln's flagship model, offering luxury options like power brakes, power steering, power windows, a 'Quadra-Lite' arrangement of four headlamps, and, of course, lots of chrome and big fins.


















For more history:

https://www.hagerty.com/apps/valuationtools/1957-lincoln-premiere

https://www.conceptcarz.com/vehicle/z9218/lincoln-premiere.aspx


Tuesday, January 11, 2022

Cisitalia 202 GT




The auto maker Compagnia Industriale Sportiva Italia - or simply, Cistalia - was founded in 1946 by Piero Dusio, an Italian businessman, race driver, and former professional soccer player. He commissioned Battista "Pinin" Farina, one of Europe's leading designers, to craft the 202. Pininfarina's radical design was to mold the body of the auto as a single unified structural skin, or monocoque, as opposed to an assemblage of parts. The body was formed out of aluminum using aerodynamic principles used in race cars. Because each car was coach-built by hand, there were multiple variations of the model. It also meant that it was very expensive and labor-intensive to produce, and only 170 were produced in total between 1947 and 1952, when the company went into receivership and was sold. This 1948 Cistalia 202 GT was the first car to enter MoMA's collection of automobiles.

































More info and history:

Drivetribe:The 1946 Cisitalia 202 Was a Milestone

Supercars.net blog:1946 Cisitalia 202

Monday, January 10, 2022

Jaguar Type E

More drawings from the Automania show at MoMA, now closed.



British car maker Jaguar Car Ltd. produced the Jaguar E-Type between 1961 and 1975. Called the Jaguar XK-E in the North American market, it caused a sensation when it was introduced at the Geneva Motor Show in 1961. Enzo Ferrari declared it was "The most beautiful car ever made," and when Frank Sinatra saw it at the New York Auto Show, he said, "I want that car and I want it now!" It immediately became an iconic status symbol for the celebrity set, owned by George Harrison, Brigitte Bardot, George Best, Tony Curtis, and others.





Designed by former aeronautics engineer Malcolm Sayer, it was based on Jaguar's D-type racing car and was the fastest passenger car in the world at the time, capable of reaching sixty-two miles (97 km/h) in less than seven seconds.




More info, history, and trivia on the Jaguar E:
GQ: The A-Z of the Jaguar E-Type