hey all shared a medium: Andy Warhol, Jeff Koons, Alexander Calder, David Hockney, Robert Rauschenberg, Frank Stella, and 12 others. But it wasn't canvas. In fact, it was the metal surfaces of a group of BMW cars, and together, for more than 35 years, they created one of the most unusual and unlikely collections of all time.
These are the BMW art cars, a group of 17 works by those world-famous artists and other leaders in the pop art movement. While most of the great works by these geniuses hang stationary on walls or stands around the world, some of these works have actually taken the track at races like Le Mans.
But, fittingly, it began with a kinetic artist: Calder. Asked by his friend Herve Poulain in 1973 if he'd be interested in painting a race car, the world's most famous creator of mobiles decided to accept the challenge. "It had always been the dearest wish of [auctioneer and race driver Poulain] to add 'artistic beauty to an already perfect object such as a racing car,'" reads an official article put out by BMW about the art cars. "And this was in the middle of the oil crisis, too, a time when the automobile was viewed critically. [Poulain] acknowledged that it would need a 'genius' to realize his idea. He found him in Alexander Calder."
As someone who had along history with kinetic art, Calder could hardly pass up the opportunity to apply his unique style to something that had 430 horsepower. And when BMW got on board, offering up a 3.0 CSL racing coupe that could compete at Le Mans, the project was a go.
"The task of developing a large idea on a small scale was nothing new to Calder," the article continues. "In 1973, he had had a jetliner painted in a similar way [and soon Calder was] painting a model on a scale of 1 to 5."
The car debuted in Paris in 1975 , but it's real "baptism of fire" was Le Mans. Though it ran well in trials, the car was pulled from the race because of a technical malfunction. But it probably wasn't because of the paint.
Though the collection has been around for 35 years, growing to its current number of 17 when Koons applied his explosive interpretation to a BMW M3 GT2 in 2010, it has rarely all been together, and never before was displayed in full here in Munich, BMW's corporate home.
But now it is, and as part of Road Trip 2011, I got a chance to see (most of) the collection at the BMW Museum, where it is being showed through September 25. Koons' addition wasn't there, however, and neither was that of Olafur Eliasson, who in a statement about the effects of climate change, created an ice sculpture around a special BMW H2R concept engine in 2007. It's hard to keep ice around for four years, after all.
But most of the rest of the collection was on hand, and placed as it is at the top of the beautiful BMW Museum, it is a worthy close to any visitor's trip to this shrine to Germany automaking, and which is just across the street from the automaker's other shrine to its brand, BMW World, otherwise known in German as "BMW Welt."