Car

50 Years and Art Cars for BMW France

This page is translated from the original post "50 ans et des Art Cars pour BMW France" in French.

Comment
Art Cars BMW

On the occasion of its fiftieth anniversary, BMW France offers a retrospective on half a century of passion at the pace of Art Cars.

In 1973, BMW Group created its first international subsidiary in Europe and chose France. A decision that paved the way for the company’s internationalization and modern history. A bold choice, but a rewarding one.

Impossible to talk about BMW’s relationship with France without mentioning the Art Cars! That’s the focus of the second exhibition, which offers an immersion into the Saga of “BMW Art Cars”. A story that begins in France at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1975, initiated by Maître Hervé Poulain, the fastest auctioneer in the world, who launched the first BMW Art Car, spectacularly featuring Alexander Calder, who is exceptionally present for the occasion.

Moving sculptures—that was Hervé Poulain’s idea when he was a young auctioneer and talented French driver who sought to connect automobiles and art. In 1975, he approached artist Alexander Calder, the inventor of mobile art, and convinced him to create a car. Together with Jochen Neerpasch, BMW’s head of motorsport, Hervé Poulain found a partner who provided a BMW 3.0 CSL, the suitable racing car. On June 14, 1975, Hervé Poulain took to the Le Mans circuit in his artwork signed by Calder, who gave him one instruction: “Win Hervé, but drive gently”.

This was the birth of the great history of BMW Art Cars. Today, the BMW Art Car collection is a globally recognized collection of nineteen cars signed by the greatest artists of the last 50 years, from Calder to Warhol, Baldessari, and soon Julie Merethu. The latter will depict a BMW M Hybrid V8, the twentieth BMW Art Car, marking BMW’s return to the 24 Hours of Le Mans in June 2024.

One click to explore BMW Art Cars

  1. Alexander Calder / BMW 3.0 CSL / 1975
  2. Frank Stella / BMW 3.0 CSL / 1976
  3. Roy Lichtenstein / BMW 320i Turbo / 1977
  4. Andy Warhol / BMW M1 / 1979
  5. Ernst Fuchs / BMW 635 CSi / 1982
  6. Robert Rauschenberg / BMW 635 CSi / 1986
  7. Michael Jagamara Nelson / BMW M3 Group A / 1989
  8. Ken Done / BMW M3 Group A / 1989
  9. Matazo Kayama / BMW 535i / 1990
  10. César Manrique / BMW 730i / 1990
  11. A.R. Penck / BMW Z1 / 1991
  12. Esther Mahlangu / BMW 525i / 1991
  13. Sandro Chia / BMW M3 GTR / 1992
  14. David Hockney / BMW 850 CSi / 1995
  15. Jenny Holzer / BMW V12 LMR / 1999
  16. Ólafur Elíasson / BMW H2R / 2007
  17. Jeff Koons / BMW M3 GT2 / 2010
  18. Cao Fei / BMW M6 GT3 / 2017
  19. John Baldessari / BMW M6 GTLM / 2016
  20. Julie Mehretu / BMW M Hybrid V8 / 2024

ALSO READ: Hyundai Art Cars make a stop in San Francisco

We also suggestthese articles:

Electric Car

Has Tesla Lost Its Mind with the Standard Model Y Roof?

Recent articles