Home » Let’s See How These Truck Engine Pictures Look To An Art Historian

Let’s See How These Truck Engine Pictures Look To An Art Historian

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As I may have brought up before, my college degree is in Art History, and while I think it actually has informed some of my professional life, it’d be kind of a stretch to say it’s been an actually useful degree, if I’m honest. I mean, I don’t regret it at all, and I think it helped me develop as a human and creative person in innumerable ways, but it doesn’t necessarily come up directly all that much. Unless I force it into things, which I like to do! Like today, with these pictures of truck engines!

Also, in that hed where I referenced an “art historian” I just meant me, which I realize is some vast hyperbole. I’m no art historian, and I don’t mean to compare myself to those that really are. Just saying.

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This started when I was looking at a brochure for a 1971 Fiat 684N-T large truck. As you may have guessed, I’m always considering starting a large-scale rubble hauling concern that exclusively uses vintage trucks, for the rubble-hauler that demands a certain old-school class for their rubble-hauling needs.

The truck is a handsome one, looking like this, a nice example of ’70s clean design:

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But that’s not what caught my eye in the brochure. What grabbed my attention were the cutaway illustrations of that beast’s big inline-six diesel:

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It’s a striking image, no question, but something about it went further, and it really reminded me of the works of early 20th-century cubist/tube-ist Fernand Léger, a painter enthralled with machines and their aesthetic, and who painted with bright primary colors and heavy black outlines.

That’s just an example, but there’s a specific one that this engine picture seems to be making some neurons fire to remember, but I can’t seem to find it anywhere. Maybe I imagined it? Regardless, that picture of an engine really, really reminds me of Léger’s paintings.

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So, let’s see what other truck engine illustrations bring back from all those art history classes!

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This one, from a 1963 Austin brochure, feels more like the careful yet moody sort of rendering of an artist like, maybe Edward Hopper, most famous for his 1942 painting Nighthawkswhich is most commonly seen debased with actual neon and Marilyn Monroe and James Dean crudely shoved in the composition.

I think it’s the muted color palette that gives this one a real Hopper feel, and a sort of underlying sense of melancholy. Sure, it’s got a bright yellow fan to try and liven things up, but you can feel what a hollow gesture that really is.

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These engines, from a 1959 Ford Thames, have a pop-art quality to them, and remind me of the work of Roy Lichtenstein, best known for his wonderful aggrandizements of comic strip panels, usually painted with exaggerated ben-day dots, the halftone method used to produce color in cheaply printed materials like newspapers.

There’s an energy and vibrancy to these engines, with their bold outlines and limited color palettes. The solid red panel behind them that they are upon but not fully contained by just adds to the energy here.

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At the other extreme, we have this extremely careful rendering of a 1955 Henschel diesel, and there’s an old-school lithography feel to this that calls to mind the work of Albrecht Dürer, the German printmaker active in the late 1400s and early 1500s and known for his detailed and careful prints, such as his famous image of praying hands.

Dürer’s goals were, at least in part, naturalism and accuracy, something vastly more crucial in an age before photography, but also to convey a mood and tone, which Dürer was a master at.

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I think we could argue this engine image accomplishes both: a highly detailed and accurate rendering of the object, and yet you can somehow feel the stoic determination of this machine to turn diesel fuel into hauling your crap. I especially like the attention given to rivets, bolts, and fasteners, which give this engine a certain formal look about it.

Finally, let’s look at this 1964 Ford Thames Trader engine:

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I like this one because it feels more like its influenced by commercial art of the 1960s – which, of course, it was, being literally commercial art from the 1960s. But there’s a method here, one that was used all over the place in this era, on book covers and poster art and more, where a halftoned photograph would be placed over a boldly colored background.

In a way, this also feels a bit like what Warhol was doing at this time, influenced as he was with commercial art, and I could see this silkscreened onto some larger Warhol canvas.

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Look at that! I used my degree! Sort of!

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AlterId is disillusioned, but still hallucinating
AlterId is disillusioned, but still hallucinating
1 month ago

Only just barely tangentially relevant to this, and one of the few interesting and obscure things I know about, is the Fiat Tagliero Building in Asmara, the capital of Eritrea and at the time the capital of Italian East Africa. Unlike the traditionalist and kitsch-ridden Nazis, Italian Fascists were all about modernity, and Art Deco Futurism was part of the projection of Italian power in its East African colonies even before the 1935 annexation of Ethiopia, although that kicked things into a higher gear.

The city is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site for its preserved history of 20th-century modern urbanism. I’d love to see it someday, but (from what I understand, anyway) Eritrea’s become pretty much a locked-down totalitarian state since it gained independence from Ethiopia, and (from what I understand, anyway) I do have a big mouth and a history of inappropriate speech and behavior, so…

Argentine Utop
Argentine Utop
1 month ago

You must see the work of Francisco Salamone in the Province of Buenos Aires. Impressive mix of Italian Futurism and Art Deco in small towns hitherto unbeknownst to architecture lovers.

AlterId is disillusioned, but still hallucinating
AlterId is disillusioned, but still hallucinating
1 month ago
Reply to  Argentine Utop

Oh, nice! And the context is reminiscent of the civic buildings constructed by the Works Progress Administration, which scattered quite a number of Deco and Futurist influenced buildings across the US at a similar time, although most of those weren’t nearly as bold as these.

Felix Tannenbaum
Felix Tannenbaum
1 month ago
Reply to  Argentine Utop

This is wild- thanks for the wormhole!!

Argentine Utop
Argentine Utop
1 month ago

Anytime! My non-legal nerdom extends to architecture, literature and drums. Also, I fix shoes.

John Gallup
John Gallup
1 month ago

As a long-ago owner of a Thames Freighter pickup, I salute this salute to the mighty motive power that propelled it.

Rapgomi
Rapgomi
1 month ago

Art history? I knew there there was a hint of Dr Zoidberg about you! 🙂

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
1 month ago

The Fiat drawings give me a constructivist vibe. That might be from the red/yellow colour combination, though.

Tim Connors
Tim Connors
1 month ago

I think the world would genuinely be a better and more interesting place if more people were to study “useless” degrees.

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
1 month ago
Reply to  Tim Connors

As opposed to going to school to do something useful like playing football. 😉

Flyingstitch
Flyingstitch
1 month ago

It would be easy to just skim past this detail:

This started when I was looking at a brochure for a 1971 Fiat 684N-T large truck.

Why? Were you tipped back in your recliner at the end of a long day, and your hand just wandered to the basket next to you and fell upon this item? Were you feverishly searching for some other Fiat brochure, and this fell out of the ‘Fa-Fi’ folder in the third drawer from the bottom of your floor-to-ceiling automotive ephemera filing cabinet? I need to know more.

Alpine 911
Alpine 911
1 month ago
Reply to  Flyingstitch

This. Yes please

MikeInTheWoods
MikeInTheWoods
1 month ago
Reply to  Flyingstitch

If it were any other person I might ask that exact question. But it’s Torch, so I imagine he was festooned in a fluffy bathrobe reading pleasantly on the crapper. That reminds me: I have a 1920’s Rolls Royce owners manual I have been wanting to send him.

Black Peter
Black Peter
1 month ago

There are a few Fernand Léger’s that bring that engine to mind;
This one
Or
This one?

Theotherotter
Theotherotter
1 month ago

Also, the composition of the Thames Trader engine reminds me of Ed Ruscha, probably ‘Standard Station’ (I think that’s the name) at the Met.

Theotherotter
Theotherotter
1 month ago

Vintage rubble should be carried away in vintage trucks!

Jason, are you familiar with @artbutmakeitsports on Instagram?

Hoonicus
Hoonicus
1 month ago

Engine cutaways always get my attention. That topshot is challenging in that the cross section is moving towards you as you scan left to right, with the cam shaft suddenly present at half point, but the cylinders and pistons seem to transition gradually.

Twobox Designgineer
Twobox Designgineer
1 month ago

I’ve seen a number of works by Léger, but it’s my first time seeing that one. What is really interesting to me about that one is how, with the combination of the lines and the coloration, this is the first one that made me think, aha, he must have been thinking about De Stijl at the time. Does the timeline for the work support that?

Droid
Droid
1 month ago

a university education is NOT supposed to be vocational training.
in the philosophical dimension, it is training on how to learn.
in the economic dimension, it is readily understood evidence that an individual can learn a business.

Twobox Designgineer
Twobox Designgineer
1 month ago
Reply to  Droid

I agree that that is the way it should be, and that it is how it probably was largely in the past.

Grumble grumble late-stage capitolism grumble grumble.

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 month ago
Jatkat
Jatkat
1 month ago

It’s funny, when I was a parts salesman deep in farm country, I had an immense amount of respect for farmers who still ran 50s-70s medium duty trucks. My favorite was a beautifully restored Ford C-Series in a dark brown color. Was pretty funny to see that ol’ girl loaded up with wheat running down the highway.

Nlpnt
Nlpnt
1 month ago

You have an Art History degree and drive a Yugo? The jokes practically write themselves

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago

“Edward Hopper, most famous for his 1942 painting Nighthawks, which is most commonly seen debased with actual neon and Marilyn Monroe and James Dean crudely shoved in the composition”

My copy tasefully has Elvis playing poker with a pack of hound dogs.

Why, yes it IS painted on black velvet! How did you know?

No Kids, Just Bikes
No Kids, Just Bikes
1 month ago

Are these in the public domain? Could y’all sell prints? I, a dullard ignorant of art theory, like these and liked reading about WHY they’re good. Would buy.

Parsko
Parsko
1 month ago

That was one Bold Fart.

Jonathan Hendry
Jonathan Hendry
1 month ago

I took an art history class senior year, and there were girls in it. Fellow students I mean. I realized I should have taken it much earlier because there weren’t many girls in my engineering classes, or my information systems classes after calculus and statics/dynamics kicked my ass.

Also I enjoyed it, and still have the textbook (Janson 4th ed.)

Also, you see Leger, I see Kirby.

Last edited 1 month ago by Jonathan Hendry
Mechjaz
Mechjaz
1 month ago

There was a bombshell in my calculus I class. She broke down in tears, just great heart-wrenching sobs at the end of the first day of Cal II the next semester. I always appreciated her expressing the feelings I was just keeping inside.

Gubbin
Gubbin
1 month ago

A young, attractive gal in my EE cohort was a regular Linux kernel contributor. It took every bit of my sysadmin-grade social skills to act cool around her.

Jonathan Hendry
Jonathan Hendry
1 month ago
Reply to  Gubbin

Yeah, there were some, but there were more in other departments.

Red865
Red865
1 month ago

Girls…the reason several of us guys took typing in High School (80s, IBM Selectrics).

Turned out to be the most useful class ever I took, since I type on computer everyday for a living.

Who doesnt love a good technical cutaway?

Fourmotioneer
Fourmotioneer
1 month ago

The Mercury post made me think it must be nice to be an artist like you to have some understanding of the design/artwork there.

And, David still calls himself an engineer despite really just blogging about buying cars he shouldn’t buy / hanging out with his SO, so not too much of a stretch to call yourself an art historian

Bags
Bags
1 month ago
Reply to  Fourmotioneer

I feel like the online-car-blog format really let Torch spread his wings, increasingly on this site but also the old site.
Having an engineering background is super helpful in auto journalism – it helps to understand why things are a certain way. Having an art background but a love for cars (and a great way with words, I’d add) makes for a tougher career path. I think in the 90s when car magazines ruled the space, it would have been hard to carve out the niche that Torch has. But thanks to the internet, we’ve been blessed with his odd renderings of mini trucks, cars that we’d see if the USSR never fell, and endless rants on 1-year-only Brazilian beetle tail lights.

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
1 month ago

Torch: you are definitely an actual Art Historian. Why, I just read a publish article about Art History written by you, so that definitely counts. Also the only other Art Historian I know has a degree in French and Spanish, so you’re the most qualified Art Historian I know.

Back when I was studying for my degree I used to ask people what they were going to do with their degree, and I got the most wonderful and baffling answers from those studying the humanities. Some had weird tangential links to future dreams, some had no plans at all beyond studying what they loved and some had frankly bafflingly literal and short-sighted plans like “become a professional philosopher”.

I studied engineering design, so, you know. Design engineer.

Jakob K's Garage
Jakob K's Garage
1 month ago

I thought Roy Lichtenstein just the second I saw those two ’59 Ford engines! (before I read your text on them) So I hereby consider myself a classy well educated guy 😀

Slower Louder
Slower Louder
1 month ago

Only one possible response: Stay classy!

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
1 month ago

“Nighthawks, which is most commonly seen debased with actual neon and Marilyn Monroe and James Dean crudely shoved in the composition.”
Here’s a nice antidote to that, Charles Schulz’s Peanuts Sunday comic strip from August 29, 1993:
https://static1.cbrimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/aug-29-93.jpg?q=49&fit=crop&w=500&dpr=2

Last edited 1 month ago by Collegiate Autodidact
Ash78
Ash78
1 month ago

Warhol would also turn every cylinder into a….

It’s so predictable I can’t even type it.

I’d like to see a VW service manual done by Liechtenstein. At least as a warning.

“BUT BRAD, IF THE TEETH ARE OFF TDC BY MORE THAN 2 DEGREES, YOU’LL DESTROY THE VALVES!”

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