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Thread: Bugatti Veyron EB 16.4 Grand Sport - Bernar Venet

  1. #1
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    Bugatti Veyron EB 16.4 Grand Sport - Bernar Venet

    (from Bugatti Press Release)

    Bugatti presents the fastest artwork ever

    Exclusive exhibition of Bernar Venet’s interpretation of the Bugatti Grand Sport
    during the Art Basel Miami Beach at the Rubell Family Collection

    Molsheim, France/Miami – December 3, 2012. French artist Bernar Venet has been invited by Bugatti, legendary supercar-maker, to create a work of art that combines the artist’s vision and passions with Bugatti’s celebrated Grand Sport. Through a congenial synthesis of artistic concept and technical possibilities, Venet has created an object that integrates the symbol of speed with a fascinating, painterly exterior and an interior that alludes to haute couture. This one-of-a-kind sculptural work will be on view at the Rubell Family Collection in Miami during Art Basel Miami Beach.

    Bernar Venet remarks, “A Bugatti is already a work of art in itself, one that transports both its beholder and its driver into new dimensions of reality. I realized how I could translate my passion for mathematical equations and scientific treatises into three-dimensional form. My works are usually
    self-referential. So I found the idea of translating the equations of the Bugatti engineers onto the
    bodywork of the car very appealing. It was, so to speak, a logical conclusion and a new challenge in
    terms of the specific form of collaboration and implementation. To me, the result is also exceptional
    when measured by artistic standards and bestows the object with a mythical character.”

    The artistic avant-gardes of the first half of the twentieth century found inspiration in the car as an
    object of desire; they depicted it in drawings, paintings and sculptures that projected absolute speed
    as their point of orientation. In the 1970s, the car served as an unconventional canvas for many artists, such as Robert Rauschenberg, Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol, who painted what became known as “art cars”. This practice continued to be embraced in the 1980s.

    Since the 1990s, international artists have concentrated on exploring the shifting cultural historical
    significance of the car. This has resulted in sculptural and conceptual responses such as those by
    Erwin Wurm, Gabriel Orozco, Christoph Keller, Olafur Eliasson and Damian Ortega, which tend to contextualize the car as a paradigm for the acute social and cultural changes of a globalized world.

    Bernar Venet´s approach is radically different from these movements and art works. He takes on the
    Bugatti Grand Sport by selecting a totally original solution, which distinguishes itself from the more
    traditional work of his predecessors. The application of mathematical formulae calculating the
    enormous power of the Bugatti engine on the car itself, allows him to implement the self-referential
    character inherent for his paintings. In doing so he pays tribute to the genius of technological science
    as well as the German Know-How of automobile production.

    In his 2012 artistic adaptation and exploration of the Bugatti Grand Sport Bernar Venet has combined image and object to highlight the fascination with this model’s absolute beauty and speed. His work unites a conceptual approach and sculptural craft on equal footing. In this work for Bugatti, Venet links the Pop artists’ claim to the car as a canvas with the utilization of every technical and aesthetic means available for designing the fastest and costliest car in the world today. Venet incorporates signs taken from the realm of production into his visual idiom and creates a total work of art that harmonizes object and outer surface, interior and exterior, and evokes the exhilarating speed of the Bugatti Grand Sport.

    Achim Anscheidt, Chief Designer at Bugatti, states, “Our collaboration with Bernar Venet, one of the most demanding artists of our time, has led to creative impulses and inspiration that will continue to motivate us in the fields of concept and design. We are pleased that this collaboration has resulted in the creation of a significant, collectible work of art. The self-image of the Bugatti brand derives from an artistic identity that unites sketch, drawing, technical planning and realization into an intermedial whole. Bernar Venet doubly honors our brand by making reference to the technical formulae of our engineers without fully revealing their secrets. It is an homage to the principle of dialogue and to the human capacity to question and redefine established boundaries. Venet is always focused on the essentials and so is Bugatti.”

    The Rubells have a long history with the artist, and Mera Rubell notes, “Our friendship with Bernar
    Venet began in the mid-1970s. Our young families bonded over dinners and great conversations in
    his SoHo loft. The children played and the adults engaged in endless talk about contemporary art.
    Don [Rubell] and Bernar have always shared an obsession with the beauty and complexities of
    mathematics. When we met Bernar he was already an accomplished artist and a very intuitive
    collector of emerging art. We benefitted from his generous insight into the artist’s perspective and
    his artwork has been part of our collection since the 1970s. Bernar’s life-long, signature obsession
    with mathematical formulas has found a ready-made canvas on the Bugatti, which is both original
    and dynamic. We’re proud to present the Venet/Bugatti collaboration at our Foundation’s museum.”

    About Bernar Venet

    Born in France and based in New York, Bernar Venet is one of the most influential contemporary
    sculptors of our time. During the summer of 2011, Venet unveiled his monumental sculptures in a solo exhibition at the Château de Versailles in France, becoming one of only five contemporary artists to be given the honor.

    From 1961 to 1963, he covered canvases in tar; his notoriety from this period was further established after his installation of a sculpture without any specific form, composed only of a Pile of Coal heaped onto the floor. Originally known for his early radical gestures, Venet moved from Nice to New York in 1966 where, over the course of the following four decades, he has continued to explore painting, poetry, film, and performance. He is known for creating abstract pieces that make reference to the language of mathematical concepts and scientific theories, bridging pure science as a subject for art and introducing the concept of “monosemy”. His capacity for intellectual abstraction and his taste for pure reason and experimentation led him to the Conceptual Art Movement of which he is one of the most prominent figures.

    He represented France at the 1974 São Paulo Biennial, and also participated in the 1977 Documenta
    VI in Kassel. 1979 marked a turning point in Venet’s career, when he began a series of wood reliefs,
    Arcs, Angles, Diagonals, and created the first of his Indeterminate Lines. That same year, he was
    awarded an artist grant by the National Endowment for the Arts.

    In 1994, Jacques Chirac, then the Mayor of Paris, invited Venet to present twelve sculptures from
    his Indeterminate Lines series on the Champs de Mars, which afterwards developed into a world tour
    in Asia, Europe, South and North America. To celebrate the establishment’s bicentennial in 2007,
    Bernar Venet was chosen by the French Ministry of Culture to paint the ceiling of the Palais
    Cambon at the Cour des Comptes in Paris. In May of 2010, President Nicolas Sarkozy inaugurated
    9 Lignes obliques, a 30-meter tall sculpture to celebrate the 150th anniversary of Nice's reunification
    with France.

    Venet is represented in many important public and private collections all over the world, including The Museum of Modern Art (New York), The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (New York), the Centre Pompidou (Paris), and the Museum of Contemporary Art (Los Angeles). In recent years, important retrospectives of the artist’s work have been mounted in Germany, Hungary, France, Spain and South Korea. After the 2009 Venice Biennale, where 1,200 square meters were dedicated to the installation of his steel Arcs, Venet is returning to the Biennale in 2013, this time with the intention of highlighting his works on canvas.

    Venet has been the recipient of several distinguishing honors such as France’s Commandeur des Arts
    et des Lettres and Chevalier de la Légion d’honneur, and is also a member of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts. In 2013, Venet will be awarded the international Julio Gonzaléz Prize by the
    IVAM in Valencia.
    "Horsepower sells motor cars, but torque wins motor races."
    -Carrol Shelby

  2. #2
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    Bugatti Veyron Grand Sport Bernar Venet

    About the Rubell Family Collection

    The Rubell Family Collection (RFC) was established in 1964 in New York City, shortly after its
    founders Donald and Mera Rubell were married. It is now one of the world’s largest, privately
    owned contemporary art collections.

    In Miami, Florida, since 1993, the RFC is exhibited within a 45,000-square-foot repurposed Drug
    Enforcement Agency confiscated goods facility. The museum and its sculpture garden are publicly
    accessible. The Contemporary Arts Foundation (CAF) was created in 1994 to expand the RFC’s
    public mission inside the paradigm of a contemporary art museum.

    The collection is constantly expanding and features such well-known artists as Jean-Michel Basquiat,
    Keith Haring, Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons, Neo Rauch, Cindy Sherman, Kara Walker and Andy Warhol. In addition to displaying internationally established artists, the RFC actively acquires, exhibits and champions emerging artists working at the forefront of contemporary art.

    Each year the Foundation presents thematic exhibitions drawn from the collection with accompanying catalogs. These exhibitions often travel to museums around the world. In 2011–12, 30 Americans was presented at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, the Chrysler Museum of Art in Norfolk, Virginia, and the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh, North Carolina. Paintings from the Rubell Family Collection were at the Fundación Banco Santander in Madrid, Spain in 2012. Time Capsule, Age 13-21: The Contemporary Art Collection of Jason Rubell is currently at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University. Other exhibitions have been presented at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Palm Springs Art Museum in California and North Carolina Museum of Art. Sponsors for recent exhibitions have included Bank of America, Puma, Audi, Lanvin and Dedon.

    The Foundation has been recognized as a pioneer in what is often referred to as the “Miami model,”
    whereby private collectors create a new, independent form of public institution. The Foundation also maintains an internship program, an ongoing lecture series and an extensive artwork loan program to facilitate exhibitions at museums around the world. Its ongoing partnership with Miami-Dade County Public Schools enables thousands of schoolchildren to visit and have educational programming inside the Foundation every year. In addition, the Foundation has a public research library containing over 40,000 volumes and a comprehensive contemporary art bookstore.

    About Bugatti

    Art – Forme – Technique: these are the brand values that laid the road map for Ettore Bugatti and
    that continue to provide the trajectory for Bugatti Automobiles today. Ettore was born into a family
    of artists: his father was a respected sculptor and furniture designer and studied at the Ecole des
    Beaux-Arts of Paris, while his brother, Rembrandt, was a significant sculptor whose work was
    exhibited at the Venice Biennale, among other venues. Ettore initially began his career by studying
    art at the Brera Art School in Milan before he dedicated himself to the art of engineering. In 1909,
    the young Ettore set up his own car manufacturing atelier in Molsheim, in Alsace, France. Art
    continued to influence him; he required his cars to be works of art and the design of his motors,
    wheels, and the controls in his cockpits derived from the formal vocabulary of the art of his time
    (Braque, Léger, Duchamps, Delaunay). He repeatedly experimented with new materials and
    repeatedly pushed himself and his cars on to new peaks of performance. Many of the models that he
    designed wrote racing history.

    In 1998, Bugatti Automobiles revived the company, which had ceased operations in 1956, and they
    also oriented themselves according to this brand DNA: with the Veyron 16.4 and its derivatives, the
    Super Sport, Grand Sport and Vitesse, they not only created the fastest and most technologically
    advanced super sports cars, but also an unmistakable, timeless design in which Bugatti’s brand values come alive once more.

    The Bugatti Grand Sport Venet will be exhibited from Wednesday, December 5 through Sunday,
    December 9, 2012, during Art Basel Miami Beach at the Rubell Family Collection, 95, NW 29th Street, Miami, FL, 33127. Opening hours: 9:00 am – 6:00 pm
    "Horsepower sells motor cars, but torque wins motor races."
    -Carrol Shelby

  3. #3
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  4. #4
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    "Horsepower sells motor cars, but torque wins motor races."
    -Carrol Shelby

  5. #5
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    Wow... that paint job looks like something Chip Foose would do, with that mock flame job.

    Seriously uncool.

  6. #6
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    Mathematical equations are the farthest things from artwork that i can think of, i do like the color matching of the rims tho

  7. #7
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    But they do get points for originality. Goes a long way in my book as long as its done tastefully. Guess they had to do a version for the rich geeks.
    "Horsepower sells motor cars, but torque wins motor races."
    -Carrol Shelby

  8. #8
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    i quite like it. the veyron is hideously ugly anyway, so no loss either way. suitably garish.
    Andreas Preuninger, Manager of Porsche High Performance Cars: "Grandmas can use paddles. They aren't challenging."

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