Title: Re: Two Pictures; One Thing in Common
Post by: Ray B. on August 29, 2008, 03:54:20 AM
Left: two posts Right: Abarth 1500 Biposto
Title: Re: Two Pictures; One Thing in Common
Post by: Otto Puzzell on August 29, 2008, 03:57:31 AM
Good one! ;D
Not the answer I was looking for.
Title: Re: Two Pictures; One Thing in Common
Post by: Ray B. on August 29, 2008, 05:38:56 AM
Instead of "post" I should have written "asparagus". I knew that I had seen that sculpture somewhere. It reminded me of Miro or Wilfredo Lam. I never found Max Ernst. But I knew the car and its link with Packard. I found it easily on a page I had already seen. And there I read:
"Its value is now largely ornamental; under Nance, Packard styling will stick to lines that are ‘architecturally correct,’ forgo the lunar asparagus". The rest was easy.
The sculpture is Max Ernst 1935 "Lunar Asparagus", the car is a Scaglione/Bertone/Abarth creation once "...purchased by Packard and brought to Detroit where it was used in Packard’s design studio..." and later dubbed by Fortune magazine Associate Editor Richard Austin Smith as "lunar asparagus". For the whole story, see:
<<< link removed >>>
Title: Re: Two Pictures; One Thing in Common
Post by: Otto Puzzell on August 29, 2008, 05:44:17 AM
Wow - I expected this one to last much longer! :o
Double points for you, mister B.
Title: Re: Two Pictures; One Thing in Common - Solved! A pair of Lunar Asparagus
Post by: Ray B. on August 29, 2008, 06:07:02 AM
I read more carefully and I see that Richard Austin Smith is not only the man who "baptized" the car, he is also the man to whom it was eventually given by James Nance and who preserved it until now.
Beautiful story and puzzle!
Title: Re: Two Pictures; One Thing in Common - Solved! A pair of Lunar Asparagus
Post by: Otto Puzzell on August 29, 2008, 06:08:52 AM
Once again, I learn something new at AutoPuzzles.
Title: Re: Two Pictures; One Thing in Common - Solved! A pair of Lunar Asparagus
Post by: Otto Puzzell on April 25, 2012, 05:53:08 AM