Collapsing on the couch after the big Thanksgiving meal, we inevitably ended up at a channel with one of those holiday movies where grown child stars from long-canceled sitcoms where you predict the ending correctly in the first five minutes. The one playing was a modernized interpretation of The Sound of Music, updated with current themes but not so much so that people that knew every song from the original would feel uncomfortable with it.
Design is the same way, and it’s summed up an acronym attributed to famed designer Raymond Loewy: MAYA. It stands for “most advanced, yet acceptable”, and it means you can introduce new things to buyers, but it can’t be so far off from what they know and expect that they won’t embrace it.
Recently Jaguar unveiled a new aesthetic for their cars at an event in Miami, and the reaction to the new look was similar to how people might respond to a director’s cut of The Sound of Music where Julie Andrew’s character dies at the end. Few people seemed to be able to relate to this drastic change of the Coventry Cat’s style.
Naturally, the people at Jaguar pontificated about the details and meaning of the look in a manner similar to how then-BMW design chief Chris Bangle talked up his “flamed surface” approach to the design of the 2002 E65 7 Series. I remember listening to Bangle’s description in period and finding it quite intriguing, ultimately understanding what he was trying to do with moving BMW design in a new direction.
Of course, fifteen minutes after he was done talking, I looked at the E65 sedan again and realized that I still disliked it. The public seemed to agree if you look at the sales drop from the much-loved E38 this BMW replaced.
Later, toned down iterations of Bangle’s style were more to my liking (and the public’s) on cars like the F01 7 Series and the E61 5 Series, an example of which I actually bought. The cars kept the basic premise of Bangle’s concept, but someone with an E39 5 series or a 1974 2002 could relate to it enough to write a check. As Lee Iacocca knew, there was nothing more important than a car’s ability to make you do just that.
I think the same situation exists with this new Jag. Unarguably it’s a striking look and something that could set this struggling brand apart, but a few modifications might make it less of a Hallmark movie where the lead characters kill each other.
Well, That’s…Different
Let’s say I decide to design a new human being. In my concept, I make the head twice as big as what is considered normal. I tell anyone that will listen that it makes perfect sense since the face is the “focal point of the person” and the “link to the soul”, where “90 percent of our interactions take place”, so that it should be made larger. What would you say? Well, you’d tell me that I make a good point, but I’m full of shit: it looks stupid.
It’s the same thing with this new Jaguar. I could go back and get the quotes from Miami presentation to put here, but why? They can describe their intent until they’re blue in the face or play an Emperor’s New Clothes type game castigating me for not seeing their vision. I might indeed be a philistine but ultimately, it makes no difference. The fact is that I’m not going to purchase this vehicle.
For Jaguar to exist in a vacuum where the vaunted E-Type never existed is impossible, and Coventry seems to acknowledge this by making their new concept pay tribute in a very, very small way to this piece of history (as they did with essentially all of their post-XKE coupes of the last sixty years) without going full-on retro and making what looks like a restomod that nobody under seventy years old will relate to. I do not believe that this this is the “retro futuristic E-Type” some critics have claimed it to be but it’s indeed a striking take on Sir Lyon’s idea of a long-nosed sports car. Still, they’ve made what I see as some major missteps in this interpretation.
At work I’m constantly trying to keep the client happy with the aesthetic of what I’m creating- even if they make crazy demands- while still ending up with a product that I know their customers will like. With this Jag, maybe I can keep the designer’s overall intent while avoiding a sales crater like that Bangle 7 series was?
Besides All That, Did You Like It?
Look, we know that the whole “copy nothing” mantra a Jaguar is to move away from the past with a different look, but so much of the dislike many have voiced with this look has nothing to do with it being very un-Jag-like: it just the damn thing doesn’t look good at all. The whole idea of launching it in Miami almost seems like they want it to be purchased based on cachet alone, like the Derelicte line of Mugatu clothes from the film Zoolander.
Enough chin scratching: let’s not waste any time getting to the hit list that most observers have made:
-The blunt, tall nose with broad amount of sheet metal between the tall headlights and front spoiler has no place on a sports car.
-A nearly flat hood the size of a basketball court seems almost totally horizontal, and the chamfered edges to transition into the side and essentially straight vertical face is something that worked on the 1980 F-Series Ford pickup but not a sports coupe or sedan.
-Why are the sides so tall and featureless? And why does it look like the whole center of the car is just one constant extrusion with no variation? Again, that works for the flanks of a pickup bed, but here? Even the base of the side windows is straight as a rod.
-The sort of cartoonish “cab backward” approach to pushing the windshield back so far is not doing the favors the designers likely thought it would in recalling the E-Type.
-Would it kill them to not have the giant rear vent detailing not cover so much of the back of the car? Maybe it’s needed for ventilation or something, but for many observers it recalls the rear of a city bus, and even those cover up much of this with advertising for local gentlemen’s clubs.
-There’s zero reason to not have a rear window on this car (or almost any car, really). Sure, you have backup cameras but so what? It makes the interior darker and more sheetmetal is the last thing this car needs.
Jaguar might respond to this as the characters in Spinal Tap once said to a particularly crushing review, “that’s nitpicking isn’t it?”
Hey, I do give props to the wheel designer that seem to really be into the rolling stock on the 1984-86 Trans Am:
At the very least, I’d like to see if changing some of these details might make something less controversial but still distinctive. I can’t speak for the Jaguar team, or the social elite that seems to be the target, but what would I do to make it into something that, five years from now when it’s depreciated to the price of a loaded new Hyundai, I’d actually buy instead of the Taycan station wagon I want now? Let’s give it a try.
Innovative Glass Rear Window!
The biggest issue to me by far on this Jaguar concept is the overall profile resembles the customized Lincoln in the movie The Car. As our own Mercedes Streeter said when she first saw the leaked renderings, could that have added any more sheet metal between the beltline and the rocker panels? The answer is no, they couldn’t, but we could find a way to make it better. Here’s the original:
Taking a cue from the E-Type, XJ6 and other Jaguars That People Liked, I’ve tried to break up that side mass by raising that character line above the rocker panel, which in turn makes the side profile seem much lighter. As with the old E-Type, there’s a dip in the beltline around the “B” pillar to break up that long, long straight stretch of unbroken line on the concept as it stands (which even seems at odds with the shape of the current side windows).
Also, it’s already been discussed how the original E-Type barely pulled off have a windshield set so far back, and this new concept definitely doesn’t make it work. You can see that I’ve moved it forward to balance the look better; keeping a long hood but still adding more cabin space to make the rear seat at least partially useable.
Here is the original from the front view:
The raised character line on the side continues around front, as the lower grille up front will rise up to make the massive slab of body-colored facade smaller. I’ve pulled the top of grille outwards slightly down lower; I’ve also tapered the sides in to make it more of a parallelogram shape.
In front I’ve brought the headlights down as well, and now the bonnet makes a more gentle curve down to the top of the lights and grille. It looks less like a coffin stuck to the front of the car, or one of those car-shaped VCR rewinders if you’re old enough to remember those dumb, boxy looking things.
I did this for a more pleasing look but the end result looks surprisingly like an homage to the old E-Type which, oddly enough, I swear was not my intent.
I’ve still kept the nose tall enough that Jaguar could have an enormous frunk up there, maybe similar to what I proposed on a Fisker Karma-based concept a little while back:
In back I’ve done some extensive modifications to the original:
We’re of course adding a damn rear window. The raised lower character line continues across the back of the car and makes that weird grille shape smaller, plus it adds a discreet area for the number plate (by the way, that PI NKO plate is available now on regtransfers for only 12,000 pounds).
Note that the city bus grille is much smaller and the taillights follow this line and wrap around the side of the car a bit which, again total coincidence, ends up being much like the early E-Type. The side window glass goes higher up into the cant rail to get more glass area and make the greenhouse appear taller and better proportionally to the thick lower section of the car.
I like it when cars end up with unintentional retro detailing that looks good and not tacked-on nostalgia (though oddly enough with the kamm tail it looks more like our rusting old S30 Datsun 280Z 2+2 than a Jag).
It is worth noting that the production version of this next generation Jag will supposedly be a four door. I’ve shown the modifications on the two-door version of the concept for visual consistency, but here are how adding extra doors might look:
The end result of all of these modifications is still not exactly something that sets my heart soaring. Still, I like it much better, and it still has a unique style that the team was obviously going for that should set Jaguar apart from the Porsches and Ferraris that will undoubtedly compete against; a good thing since I don’t see anyone passing up on either of those brand’s cars to buy this thing in its current form.
Remember That Cats Have Nine Lives
To be clear, the production version of this new Jaguar might be different in a number of ways from what is being shown now, but it’s doubtful that the final product will stray too far from this direction. Like any new design, it takes time to get used to something totally new. The more you look at the new Jaguar concept, the more you see that is actually quite intriguing, but there are still elements that set your teeth on edge which ruin the whole visual experience. I think it’s possible to preserve the “good” parts of “unique” while eliminating those that turn people away.
I don’t envy those that have rebrand and restyle a company with nearly a century of history and multiple entries in “World’s Most Beautiful Car” books. Jaguars have inspired the design of lesser cars for years from the FD RX-7 all the way to our boy Stephen’s “Swamp Thing” Buick Park Avenue, and whether we like it or not they will continue to influence studios across the globe. For ages, the Jaguar has built up a lot of equity in their name being synonymous with grace and beauty; the irony is that even when they launched cars undeserving of that description (like the XJ40 and XJ-S) the public and press seemed to accept them as gorgeous.
I really hope that’s not going to be the case here.
Images via Jaguar unless noted
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To me, the new one looks like a BeamNG Panamera. The old one is much more striking, which I think is what a reset needs.
Well, it’s certainly an improvement. In your redesign I can begin to see something that might realistically be sold and only lightly mocked when it drives by. I appreciate colors on cars, so I applaud the effort with the pink even though it looks terrible. What if this car was black? It would have some serious Batmobile vibes that wouldn’t be a bad thing.
Back end is an improvement, but I like the strength of the main character line on the concept more than yours. Adding the subtle curve just makes it look weaker.
Mmmm, disagree. The straight line screams brawny power to me, which is fine on some things but a Jag should be more about svelte elegance. It may be weaker with the curve, but it’s also lighter, which this slab-sided monstrosity desperately needs.
I made a quesstimation sketch of a possible production version before the concept was shown, that merged the proportions of the spyshots with the teasers of the concept, and just like you I added a little ‘hip dip’ in front of the rear wheels, and it ended up very close to your sedan version.(only with slightly worse proportions and being a little skewed as it was handdrawn with a ballpoint pen on some A4 printer paper.)
All the doodles and sketches I’ve done on paper and digitally of a coupe version instantly makes me think of Datsun Z-cars. And as soon as I noticed that, I started seeing more of the old Fairlady in the concept too, with its squared ‘grill’ area and perfect roofline and a character line that cuts close to the top of the wheelwell from headlight to kammback, and even the shape of the little rear side windows and the brass part sitting exactly where the FairladyZ script would be…
I guess when they say ‘Copy Nothing’, they still made an exception for the one car that many people say improved on the E-types lines.
As I said in the post, I think with the changes especially it looks like the S30 2+2 Z we had for ten years. Imagine the car in this attached ad but in dark green with lots of rust:
1977 Datsun 280Z 2+2 4-Speed for sale on BaT Auctions – closed on March 19, 2021 (Lot #44,810) | Bring a Trailer
Yeah, making the taillight panel/grill narrower really made it even clearer. There’s a lof of likeness to the S130 that came after too, with the more pronounced line separating fender and roof.
I guess I can admit that the line along the side could be a callback to the XJ-S, and the headlights do look a bit like XJ-S lights squinting really hard.
I’d start by painting the whole thing British Racing Green.
And the bringing back the old Jaguar logos.
And bringing back the general form, if somewhat simplified.
You know what I just described?
Rebadge an MX-5. Throw in some leather and other British acroument ala Mini. That’s how to translate the heart and soul of what driving a Jaguar once was (E-Type) into the modern world.
way to build something literally no one would buy.
Bishop, I love your changes! What I can’t understand is why they would use a coupe for the concept while not intending to ever make one. Sure, it could make a great salon but with their heritage matched with the expected performance on a EV platform, why not have a coupe?!
The long front and low profile reminds me of the beautiful long nosed Caddy concept from several years ago that was displayed as a convertible at Pebble. That was a beautiful car that never came to fruition!
The new Jag is still bad enough with all the Bishop changes that I’d rather drive a K-Car. Congrats, Jag, nothing has ever made me stoop that low.
Ha ha yeah, I’d rather drive any K-car…my brother and I have made fun of the Plymouth Reliant/Dodge Aries for so long now that it’s hilarious that I have a SMALL appreciation for K-cars now
None of these design modifications made here are enough to unturd this design. The overall design intent and design language is brutalist and Jaguar is a brand steeped in heritage. That was all scrapped. In their narcissistic fever they forgot luxury car brands is all about heritage! Thats one of their core competencies! This is why people reject this rebranding. Of course jaguar needs to evolve and make advancements in both engineering and design but what will drive their sales and success comes from the quality of their product in terms of engineering, design and ability to meet customers expectations, not a
self servicing ego tripmarketing exercise.Nice effort. I still think the original is just a rehash of any Dodge “future-concept” from the early 2000s. Just nothing with this Jag concept that catches my eye and makes me think “yeah, I would love to have that piece on my vehicle”.
I agree not having a rear window is pointless, but I still like the original just fine. A steam locomotive doesn’t look aerodynamic but it can still convey a sense of power and speed.
“For ages, the Jaguar has built up a lot of equity in their name being synonymous with grace and beauty; the irony is that even when they launched cars undeserving of that description (like the XJ40 and XJ-S) the public and press seemed to accept them as gorgeous.”
Speaking as the proud and thoroughly unrepentant owner of an XJ40, I find it to be a very attractive car to this day and I still look back at it fondly when I park it. I am quite happy to be “that guy” at Jaguar gatherings and being the only one with an XJ40. The analogy I use is that I’d be the guy at the Mustang show proudly displaying his 4-cylinder automatic Mustang II Ghia notchback in powder blue with a vinyl roof.
I do think your modifications considerably improve the concept design but I’m not sure it’s really salvageable. The point of a big cat is not “chonky cat”, it’s svelte, graceful lines and there’s just no way to get there from the starting point.
I feel the same about my ‘96 XJ12 (X305).
I’m jealous! I have a beat X300 and an excellent X306, but the X305 6.0 V12 moves you from executive class into the aristocracy 🙂
Glad you like it!
I think if the XJ40 were released in a vacuum it would have been better received than it was. It’s hardly an unattractive car but it was replacing the holy of holies SIII XJ6 which still counts as one of my favorites of all time and probably why I (unfairly?) hold a grudge. I do wish some of the things they did in the X300 and later facelifts were done earlier.
It’s like a band dropping a new album after releasing an absolute masterpiece; it’s usually doomed.
Oh! That would be a good name for another Ora car…I love the names Good Cat and Funky Cat so just add the “Ora Chonky Cat!”
It’s an improvement, and while not my cup, I think their target market would still like the ostentation of it while actually being able to drive it. It’d be fun to see your design in classic green or even silver. Kudos to big J if they’re planning on actually selling a pink car, though. From all the wraps I’ve seen on Cybertrux, even rich people are bored with silver/grey/black.
Nope, not better. The 4 doors is good tho.
The original version had a windshield so small that I don’t know where you would buy windshield wipers. I would say they were going for aerodynamics, but the front and rear end shows that they don’t care.
They’d have to do three wipers like on the E-Type
Or the Toyota FJ Cruiser, or the Morgan Aero.
I like this version much better. Which may be damning with faint praise.
And it still looks like it was designed in Soviet Russia, where nothing copies you!
I was under the impression that the preferred medium for auto designers was clay, not shit…
Still think it needs round headlights.
Or slightly oval. how about round with an oval surround, mimicking the clear lenses over the European Jags?
I actually liked the oval headlights on the XJ-S, even though I really disliked everything about that car with the possible exception of the very last cleaned-up versions in Eventer shooting brake form. The standard US spec car (especially that XJS-C) was pretty awful.
jaGUar: copy Bishop
(please?)
Nice panamera you’ve got there.
I can’t believe you actually successfully polished that turd. Your work with that (insert expletives here) ugly starting point resulted in a rather handsome design that I might actually look at buying. Assuming that the color is not that rather hideous pink.
I like the mods, they all have the effect of de-chonkization of the concept that for all it’s sharp angles managed to look fat. You managed to do that without taking some of the shock factor out of the original design so, good job on that.
And yeah those wheels are easily the best thing out of that entire concept.
Your thinking largely mirrors my own. I like the subtle throwbacks to older classic Jaguars. I also appreciate how you gave it a shape beyond “slab with wheels”.
I’d have raised the weird fender garnish (camera pods, I believe they are?) to the same plane as the headlights.
I’d also integrate the taillights into the “city bus” rear grille, so they’re visible to, well, city bus drivers and other tall vehicle operators. Either instrad if the one you made or in addition to.
Tuck the wheels inside the body, give them a different design that doesn’t mimic those on countless other brands.
The four-door version would have coach-style doors.
I’d paint the A-pillar. I’m so bored of black A-pillars and the faux “floating roof” look.
The branding needs to be bold, like a 911 GT3’s side decals. So the grilles should have a big Jaguar leaping across as part of the design. But not in such a way that makes it look like it’s behind bars, I guess. Otherwise it could be from any number of other brands.
If they want to get snazzy they could make the grilles into functional LED panels (at least partially), and show an animated Jaguar logo leaping from the center of the grille to the side that the turn signal is indicating, in amber, of course. Brake lights would animate the Jaguar as crouching and preparing to pounce or run.
They could totally have fun with this.
Put a Dalmatian wrap on the original design and no one would doubt for a minute this was a movie car for the next Cruella sequel.
I’m not good enough with Photoshop to do it, but since there is a really good side view photo of the actual car:
https://www.autoexpress.co.uk/jaguar/365041/new-jaguar-gt-spyshots-pictures
Would it be possible to map the concept onto the spy shot? I guess things like the wheel centers and A-pillar base are going to have to be constant, even with all of the weird camo.