Posted by KYTE on 21st Dec 2016
I
think about Syd Mead a lot.
An intense amount of science fiction and industrial design aesthetic are
directly based around or at least inspired by his concepts.
There's solidness to his designs. Even what stays as a painting.
Every mechanical bit is rendered with proportions that let you almost feel your
hands move over the contours and edges of industrial metal.
Mead was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on July 18,
1933 to a family led by a roving baptist minister. He was an artistic child in the post-Gernsback world with an affinity for
covered fenders and the smoothed bodies of early luxury cars.
After highschool Mead did inking, character art, and background illustration at
Alexander Film Company but in 1953 he joined the US Army. While stationed in
Okinawa, Japan, he sent to chief Ford designer John Mueller Reinhart some
drawings and also comments about the newly announced Lincoln Continental Mark
II.
Reinhart's reply was pretty much, "If you're interested in car design then
you should consider Art Center in Los Angeles".
Out of the Army, in 1956 he headed for LA and was immediately recruited by
Elwood Engel of Ford Motor Company’s Advanced Styling Studio upon completion at Art Center.
After two years, Syd Mead felt confident enough to move toward a more freelance
life and left Ford but continued to design for them afterward.
From Phillips to US Steel, Tron to Aliens, Mead's designs can be found all over
but even more apparent is the impact he's left on design.
Ford Ranger-II
Ford Gyron
Ford J Car
For America, manual shifting out of necessity has been something nearly extinct for quite some time. The days of manual shifting for style seem almost up too. Different attempts at automatic gear shifting in automobiles have been explored as early as the 1890's. Many designs emerged using various means of operation. Some early vehicles unsuccessfully employed equipment to aid in ease [...]
Not many know that the original Mustang Ford rolled out was quite a different beast from America's favorite muscle car.On October 7, 1962, the Mustang I was unveiled at the United States Grand Prix in Watkins Glen, NY. The sleek, futuristic piece of metal that drove up was a roofless two-seater with a 4-cylinder mid-engine, but was just barely [...]