Tampilkan postingan dengan label 1954. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label 1954. Tampilkan semua postingan

Minggu, 06 Maret 2011

1954 Chrysler DeSoto Adventurer II

The Adventurer II was commissioned by Chrysler and designed by Ghia for the European car show circuit. With Chrysler Hemi V-8 power and Italian coachwork, the DeSoto concept is a predecessor to many of the American/Italian designs which came much later Its flowing, rakish shape is pure 1950s exuberance.
The Adventurer made the rounds at the European car shows, including Turin; and its public appearances ended in 1956, when King Mohammed decided to purchase the vehicle.
 The king only owned the car for about a year, and its second owner, an American diplomat, brought the car to the U.S. It spent time in Florida and eventually became part of the Blackhawk Museum, by which time it was a well-regarded show car rather than a weekend driver.
The Adventurer, is described as a 98-point concours car, and notched a third place at Pebble Beach, and a string of firsts at various other car shows Including Meadow Brook Hall, Keel sand Wheels in Houston, L.A Concours and various other special events. 
 The interior is fitted in 2 tone Leather with fitted luggage. The cockpit features big and bright gauges with engine turn insert and a padded dash. Equipped with power windows, including power retraceable rear window. Powered by a 331 Hemi and coupled to an automatic transmission.
The 1954 Adventurer Ghia concept remains a beautiful one-of-a-kind, a fusion of American muscle and Italian style that imagines a glamorous path for DeSoto.

Currently, this beautiful vehicle is on display at The San Diego Collection.







Selasa, 04 November 2008

Mille Miglia 1954 - Ascari's fans



Pencil on archival white paper, digitally colorized 12"x 9"
� Paul Chenard 2008


Son of a famous Italian racing hero Antonio Ascari, two-time World Champion Alberto Ascari moved to the Lancia Racing Team from Ferrari for 1954, but the Lancia's Formla 1 cars were under-developed, and not really in contention.

Ascari did find success in the well-developed D24 sports car, winning the grueling Mille Miglia (Thousand Mile) race.

In the following year, the Lancia D50 Formula 1 was again raced by Ascari, but retired in the 2 first races. In fact, he lost control and ended up in Monaco Harbour in that Grand Prix.

Four days later, he was killed testing a Ferrari Monza sports car; Italy lost another one of it's great racers. He died at the age of 36, like his father.