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MAY 13, 2014 | DEARBORN, MICHIGAN
FORD MUSTANG GETS FINE ART TREATMENT: U.K. SCULPTOR ROBIN
BARK CREATES 50 YEARS LIMITED EDITION PIECES
U.K.-based Robin Bark has created a
limited-edition 1965 Ford Mustang fastback sculpture to celebrate 50 years
of the iconic sports car
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Bark captures the essence of the original Mustang in
a handcrafted piece that evokes power and motion
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Only 500 individual works will be produced, each
cast in solid aluminum, polished, numbered and signed by the artist
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For many fans of automotive design, the vintage Ford
Mustang has long been considered a rolling work of art. Now, the iconic
pony car has become a piece of fine art. As part of the 50 years of
Mustang celebrations, U.K.-based artist Robin Bark has been licensed by
Ford Motor Company to turn Mustang into a limited-edition collectible
sculpture.
Bark is well versed in the arts, with experience in
industrial design, graphic design ceramics and metalwork. He frequently
blends his passion for automobiles with his love of art.
“I think I was drawing cars the moment I was born,” said Bark. “Growing up
in South Africa, I wanted to design cars, but there wasn’t much call for
it, so I switched from industrial design to graphics, which took me into
advertising for a time.”
Bark eventually returned to the U.K. and became an art teacher, where he
experimented in new mediums including metal casting. He went on to develop
a series of cast-aluminum sculptures of classic motorbikes and sports
cars.
Bark starts a project with an extensive series of photos of the car, which
he then translates into rough engineering drawings. As his first American
car sculpture, Mustang came as a unique challenge for Bark.
“Mustang is a very different shape from the earlier cars I had done, which
were more classically streamlined,” he said. “I look for what the
designers were trying to achieve with shapes, and try to capture the
essence of the car while also imparting a sense of motion to a static
object.”
click on a photo below to enlarge:
Bark shapes an initial model in clay. The fundamental shape is then
transferred into a resin version, which polishes to work out how the light
reflects off the contours. The resin model then becomes the pattern to
cast an aluminum prototype. Bark stays true to Mustang’s iconic design
while using as little detail as possible, avoiding lines and features that
distract from the fundamental shape of the car.
“I tried to reveal its story as it reflects in the light,” he explained.
“From the shark-bite nose to the long, sweeping line of the fastback roof
to the tri-bar taillamps, Mustang has a quintessential profile that makes
it easily recognizable to everyone on the road,” said Moray Callum, Ford
vice president, global design. “Robin Bark has captured the essential
nature of one of the greatest Mustangs in his sculpture, creating an
object of art that appears to be fluid motion.”
Shaped to the sculptor’s satisfaction, the resin model is sent to a
specialist casting pattern maker. Working with a traditional foundry based
in Guildford, U.K., the raw aluminum castings are produced in batches of
10 at a time. The foundry specializes in small batch production of unique
castings and regularly creates reproduction parts for vintage race cars
such as cylinder heads and gearbox casings for vintage 1930s-era grand
prix race cars.
Each casting is polished to a finished piece that is signed and numbered
by the artist and placed in a commemorative wood box. No more than 500 of
the 1965 Mustang fastback sculptures will be produced.
Bark has shown his prototype at Mustang Club events in France and the
U.K., where fans responded with great enthusiasm to his interpretation of
the original Ford Mustang, ordering several pieces.
The limited-edition sculptures are available through the artist’s website,
http://www.robinbark-motorart.com or at
http://www.merchandise.ford.com.
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