Blog Archive
-
▼
2009
(434)
-
▼
December
(46)
- YAMAHA MIO BLUE AIR BRUSH MODIFICATION
- Hummer HB compact off-roader
- Want an Aston Martin Cygnet? You'll need to have a...
- USA Today looked at cars on sale between 2000 and ...
- What to do with all those empty car dealerships?
- Hyundai Tucson 2010
- Jupiter MX Full Modification
- Chrysler 300 2010
- Aprilia Mana 850 cc Full Specifications
- Lotus celebrates return to F1 with Exige S Type 72
- Schumacher reportedly signs with Mercedes-Benz F1 ...
- Mercedes-Benz CLS shooting brake in the works?
- Will he resurface after March 2010?
- Ford goes open source
- Ferrari 458 Italia 2010
- Toyota Camry XLE Overview 2010
- 2010 MR Audi S3 Black Performance Edition
- Volkswagen Scirocco R 2010
- Spyker Renews Offer for SAAB
- NEW JUPITER Z 2010 MODIF
- Thailand underbound Mio modification
- Harley Davidson Extreme Modifications
- NEW MIO MODIFICATION 2009
- Retro Modifications of MIO
- HONDA CBR NEW 2010
- 2011 Volvo C30 T5 and C30 T5 R-Design
- Nissan Maxima SV Sport is a lot of car for a lot o...
- Mercedes-Benz begins road-testing electric SLS sup...
- Alfa Romeo Kamal Concept snapped at Fiat R&D facil...
- Volvo prices 2011 C30 T5 from $24,600, C30 T5 R-De...
- Concept of Yamaha Vixion Modification
- KAWASAKI KX-10Z MODIFICATION
- Honda Tiger With A BOX
- STYLE OF YAMAHA VIXION MODIF 2009
- 2010 Nissan Rogue S Krom Hits the Road
- Volkswagen Introduces LED Rear Lights for the Golf R
- 2010 Suzuki Kizashi GTS is up for the Challenge
- 2010 Chevrolet Equinox
- Hyundai first started building cars at its Montgom...
- $336 million in Detroit plant to build Chevrolet Volt
- J.D. Power releases sat-nav study findings, crowns...
- The Hybrid Race Car : Toyota CS&S Concept
- Customized Yamaha Mio
- Honda Accord Crosstour 4WD - 2010
- Toyota Sienna 2010
- Audi R8 5.2 V10 FSI Quattro - 2010
-
▼
December
(46)
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Will he resurface after March 2010?
There's little question Chris Bangle is one of the greatest designers of his generation. His cars were rarely pretty, but their influence resonated around the automotive world like a pipe bomb in an echo chamber. Much like cutting edge graphic design is born inside art school graduate schools years before it's ready for massive public consumption, Bangle's Bimmers were ahead of their time. And they changed nearly everything. Controversial? Of course, but that's how the public digests new design. Skittishly at first, before becoming so used to the flavor that it's hardly noticed anymore.
Case in point: The Toyota Camry, probably the most conservative car in the world, and one that attempts to appeal to as great a cross-section of buyers as possible, uses the rear end (a.k.a. Bangle Bustle or in the parlance of our times, Bangle Butt) from the 2002 BMW E65 7 Series. Again, you don't have to like Chris Bangle's work, but to deny his influence is to be willfully ignorant. This past February, Mr. Bangle retired from both BMW and the car industry as a whole. And to our knowledge he's been laying pretty low. That is until Britain's Car caught up with him at his design studio/vineyard in northern Italy.
How's he doing? Well, he seems to be the big art school nerd he was before he was able to retire to the Italian country side. In other words, he talks about a car's inherent "carness," as well as stuff like, "It is about creating a different type of relationship between design, design's outcome, the product and the people who use and enjoy it." A big however, however, is in order because we get treated to a more critical, dare we say, unrestrained side of Chris Bangle.
"I feel incredibly motivated to find out how design can overturn this horror of a world," Bangle tells Car. That's one way of taking design to the next level. Bangle also lays some wood into the current state of car design. "You can always argue that the generation before didn't have the constraints that we have, but that's crap." As you can see, it's a fun read. As for the big question – whether or not Chris Bangle will once again design cars after his non-compete clause expires in March of next year, let's just say... maybe.