Auto Erotica: new book chronicles the sensuous simplicity of vintage car ads
Vintage car ads, from the 1960s to the 1980s, are honoured in the cheekily titled new book Auto Erotica
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Billed as a ‘A grand tour through classic car brochures of the 1960s to 1980s’, Auto Erotica is Jonny Trunk’s loving homage to an era of bold colours, quirky cars, and exceptional graphic design, not to mention the occasional dose of casual sexism. The automobile was always considered a very potent consumer product, something that could be made to appeal to our base instincts, aspirations, and self-image. The combination of design, style, performance, and status was compelling, and the very best car ads appealed not only to prospective owners but served to boost the ego of those drivers who had already taken the plunge and wanted retrospective justification.
Vintage car ads in all their graphic brilliance
Auto Erotica steers clear of the billboard, magazine spread or TV screen, in favour of the printed ephemera that bolstered these brands in the form of dealer display cards, manuals, booklets, and flyers. Arranged via brand, having this panoply of printed matter makes a welcome diversion from accessing it randomly via Instagram, and Trunk’s collection runs from acknowledged classics to the (un)justly overlooked.
The much-praised graphic simplicity of the era’s VW ads were no outliers; Volvo and Mercedes, among many others, gave them a run for their money (although admittedly VW’s copywriting skills were second to none). In these pages you’ll find the bold populism of Ford, the well-crafted avant-garde of Citroën, as well as eerily contemporary 1970s colour charts.
Produced with Fuel’s Damon Murray and Stephen Sorrell, Auto Erotica has given these throwaway remnants of half-remembered car culture the presentation they deserve. There is graphic brilliance within, a rich palette of colours unlike anything on today’s roads, as well as a heart-tuggingly straightforward evocation of the desire and romance of the open road.
INFORMATION
Auto Erotica: A Grand Tour through Classic Car Brochures of the 1960s to 1980s
Jonny Trunk. Edited by Damon Murray, Stephen Sorrell. Foreword by Bob Stanley
FUEL Publishing, £24.95, fuel-design.com (opens in new tab)
Jonathan Bell has written for Wallpaper* magazine since 1999, covering everything from architecture and transport design to books, tech and graphic design. He is now the magazine’s Transport and Technology Editor. Jonathan has written and edited 15 books, including Concept Car Design, 21st Century House, and The New Modern House. He is also the host of Wallpaper’s first podcast.
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