The voluptuous 220 mile/hr Icona Vulcano Titanium hypercar

Icona Vulcano Titanium debuts at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance 2015.

icona vulcano titanium on 2015  pebble beach concours d'elegance concept lawn

The Italian designhouse Icona is reviving its 2013 Vulcano hypercar concept with a unique titanium and carbon fiber body. The concept first presented at the Shanghai Motor Show in April 2013 and at Pebble Beach the same year features a strongly sculpted body side and shapes helping to evacuate the hot air from the engine and reduce air turbulence generated by the wheels. The overall design of the Vulcano didn’t change much from the 2013 concept version with 1,000 horsepower of hybrid technology.

“Inspiration for the Vulcano came from the world’s fastest plane, the Blackbird SR-71, whose sharp and dramatic silhouette complimenting its sensual surface transitions was key to the styling of the Vulcano.” said Icona design director Samuel Chuffart.

icona vulcanotitanium 2015-- icona vulcanotitanium 2015- icona vulcanotitanium 2015 icona vulcanotitanium --

The Vulcano Titanium was built by Italian coachbuilder Cecomp, while the powertrain is the work of Claudio Lombardi,
ex-Scuderia Ferrari director and mastermind of numerous world champion cars with Mario Cavagnero, the man behind the
Lancia Racing team and father of the engine of many championship-winning cars (the famous Lancia Integrale and 037,
as well as the complete Peugeot T16 family).

The Vulcano (volcano in Italian) has a mid-front engine calibrated for homologated road and race use with an optimum balance of usability and efficiency. Capable to be tuned to well over 1000 horsepower should the owner demand it, the optimized 670 horsepower and 840 N/m of its supercharged V8 is sourced from the record-beating ZR1 and is coupled with a paddle-shift close ratio gearbox from Automac Modena, allowing 0 to 60 miles/hr in 2.8 seconds and 120 miles/hr in 8.8 seconds. Let’s hope the concept will see the production phase soon enough.

icona vulcanotitanium - icona vulcano titanium on 2015  pebble beach concours d'elegance concept lawn

 

Leica Ultravid 8×32 ‘Edition Zagato’

Italian automotive atelier meets Leica binocular – The Leica Ultravid 8×32 ‘Edition Zagato.’ Leica chose The 2015 Chantilly Concours d’Elegance in France (on 6 September 2015) to present a special limited edition – the Leica Ultravid 8×32 ‘Edition Zagato’ made in collaboration with Italian automotive atelier Zagato. The outer shell of the ‘Edition Zagato’ is … Read more

2015 Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance raised a substantial amount of money

Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance Charity Donations Top $20 Million Mark.
Pebble Beach Concours D'Elegance 2015-behind the scenes

Continuing a tradition that now extends 65 years, the top collector cars in the world made their way onto the show
field of the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance last Sunday. At the same time, the event raised a substantial amount of
money to help people in need.

At an appreciation reception at Pebble Beach Resorts, Pebble Beach Company CEO William L. Perocchi and Concours Chairman Sandra Button jointly announced that charitable donations raised since the Concours began now exceed $20 million – a milestone for the event that dates back to 1950.

Pebble Beach Concours D'Elegance 2015

“I continue to be inspired by the generosity of the collector car community,” said Button. “Entrants bring their automotive treasures here to share with others, judges bring their expertise, sponsors often debut new cars and provide items for opportunity drawings—and, together, we are able to make a solid contribution to better the lives of others.”

This year’s event raised close to $2 million. Through its primary charitable partner, the Pebble Beach Company Foundation, grants are distributed to 100 local nonprofit educational programs impacting the lives of more than 10,000 children in Monterey County. Perocchi stressed that most of the charitable donations raised by the Concours are put to use in the local community, where the funds can help address issues like poverty, hunger, and literacy.

“It is easy to see the affluence of this area, but we cannot overlook the many needs in this county,” Perocchi said. “It’s because of the generosity of our donors and charity partners that we can significantly impact the lives of Monterey County residents. The money raised during this event, and in turn distributed to our community partners, helps those in need.”

Celebrating its 40th anniversary this year, the Pebble Beach Company Foundation was created in 1975 with a mission to provide youth with the building blocks of success, starting with literacy and education. In keeping with this focus, the Foundation also works with the Concours to oversee a scholarship program created to honor racing great Phil Hill
and encourage the next generation of automotive enthusiasts.

Pebble Beach Concours D'Elegance 2015-concept lawn Pebble Beach Concours D'Elegance 2015-the awards Pebble Beach Concours D'Elegance 2015- Aston Martin Vulcan pebblebeach

Along with historic vehicles at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance the contest had the Concept Lawn where manufacturers bring vehicles that represent their latest and greatest in design and performance.

  • Complete List of 2015 Winners @ 2015 Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance:Best of Show

1924 Isotta Fraschini Tipo 8A, owned by Jim Patterson

1924 Isotta Fraschini Tipo 8A F. Ramseier & Cie Worblaufen Cabriolet
Jim Patterson/The Patterson Collection, Louisville, Kentucky.

  • Best of Show Nominees

1914 Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost Kellner Torpedo Phaeton
Doug Magee Jr., Wolfeboro, New Hampshire.

1937 Delahaye 145 Franay Cabriolet
Sam & Emily Mann, Englewood, New Jersey.

1953 Abarth 1100 Sport Ghia Coupé
Grant Kinzel, Calgary Alberta, Canada.

  • Most Elegant Awards

J.B. & Dorothy Nethercutt Most Elegant Closed Car
1932 Rolls-Royce Phantom II Continental Figoni & Falaschi Pillarless Berline
Don Williams, Danville, California

Gwenn Graham Most Elegant Convertible
1937 Delahaye 145 Franay Cabriolet
Sam & Emily Mann, Englewood, New Jersey

Most Elegant Open Car
1914 Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost Kellner Torpedo Phaeton
Doug Magee Jr., Wolfeboro, New Hampshire

Strother MacMinn Most Elegant Sports Car
1938 Alfa Romeo 8C 2900B Touring Berlinetta
Jon Shirley, Medina, Washington.

1904 Duryea Four-Wheel Phaeton from Barry & Karen Meguiar

The Ultimate Cigar Experience

The Ritz-Carlton, Half Moon Bay Features the Most Expensive Cigar in the World, His Majesty’s Reserve. The Ritz-Carlton, Half Moon Bay has joined with Fumar Cigars, the industry leader in legendary on-premise cigar programs, to feature the most expensive cigar in the world, His Majesty’s Reserve Gurkha. The Gurkha cigars created more than a century … Read more

Aston Martin’s Second Century: The new 2016 DB9 GT

Aston Martin's new 2016 DB9 GT

Aston Martin’s new 2016 DB9 GT made its global debut at the Pebble Beach Automotive Week, accompanied by a glimpse of Aston Martin’s Second Century with the DBX concept, Lagonda Taraf and Aston Martin Vulcan supercar.

Claiming the title of the most potent DB9 yet devised, by virtue of its uprated 6.0-litre V12 engine which now boasts
540bhp, the DB9 GT is the luxury British sports car maker’s most compelling production ‘DB’ to date. The DBX concept
– now confirmed for production – “underlines Aston Martin’s growth plans by signaling an expansion into the luxury GT
crossover market as part of a wider strategy to develop the strongest and most diverse product portfolio in the
company’s history.”

After completion of his first 150 days as CEO of Aston Martin, Andy Palmer announced Aston Martin’s ‘Second Century’
plan. A comprehensive strategy for the ongoing growth and development of the 102-year old sport car maker, the plan
laid out the principle mid-term actions, particularly in the area of new product development that will drive the
growth of the company.

Aston Martin Vulcan pebblebeach

The 800+bhp Aston Martin Vulcan made its second bow in North America following a New York debut in April and was also on display at the Aston Martin Estate alongside DBX.

Styled entirely in-house by the Aston Martin design team led by Chief Creative Officer Marek Reichman, the Aston
Martin Vulcan is powered by the most potent iteration yet of the brand’s naturally-aspirated, 7.0-litre V12 petrol
engine. With a powerplant developed in conjunction with Aston Martin Racing, this front mid-engined, rear-wheel drive
sports car draws extensively on the brand’s rich GT motorsport experience.

Marking a first appearance in the North American market, the new Lagonda Taraf super saloon draws inspiration from
the highly sought-after William Towns-designed Lagonda of 1976 and features many of the same cutting edge engineering
techniques seen in modern Aston Martin sports cars, such as the extensive use of carbon fibre body panels.

Aston Martin’s Second Century

 

This week’s new exhibitions

Massouras, Souvenir Pompeii Scavi


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “This week’s new exhibitions” was written by Robert Clark & Skye Sherwin Sherwin, for The Guardian on Friday 14th August 2015 12.15 UTC

Alexander Massouras, Nottingham

Alexander Massouras is an Oxford University fellow, art historian and collector, as well as an artist. And it shows – but not in any unfavourable fashion. While it might be presumed that artists intuitively indulge in getting their hands dirty, whereas academics reflect on the outcomes of their struggles, Massouras is unashamed to present himself as an artist who spends as much time in the library as the studio. Accordingly, his paintings, as translucent as projected lecture slides, always seem critically reflective. An image of a sun-drenched classical facade is created with paint stripper as well as oil on linen. Drawings are semi-erased and figures set against blackout backgrounds. Whether working from archaeological plans or holiday snaps, his images are not just pictures but also meditations on the contrivances of memory and the manipulations of reproduction.

Syson Gallery, to 19 Sep

RC

Performance Art + Northern Ireland, Belfast

Given that performance art has flourished in Northern Ireland over the last few decades against the background of the Troubles, there has been very little art historical recognition of the fact. This exhibition aims to redress that oversight with live performances, video and photographic documentation, and assorted archival memorabilia. Intriguingly, it stresses how suited performance art has been to addressing the social uncertainties of political problem zones. The renowned likes of Alastair MacLennan, Sandra Johnston and André Stitt are seen to have infiltrated a divided society with acts of painful endurance, existential rage and the occasional, disarming relief of hilarity.

Golden Thread GLuxury Designer Shoeallery, to 30 Sep

RC

Rick Copsey, Manchester

From Turner to De Kooning, wild-at-heart artists have forced the raw matter of paint, with its quick liquidity and viscous malleability, into artworks that reflect the rhythms of nature, their tactile sensuality differentiating them from the clinical gloss of landscape photography. Against this backdrop, Rick Copsey’s recent work confounds. On the face of it, these are proper photographs, Digital C-type metallic prints mounted on aluminium. Yet their imagery evokes universes of Romantic wonderment alien to the forensic exactitude of the camera. In fact, what we are looking at are blown-up photographs of minute details of the surface of the artist’s paintings. The common assumptions about photographic verity are brushed aside in Copsey’s trompe l’oeil shadows, perilous ridges and ambiguous refractions of abstract light and dark.

Object / A, Sat to 19 Sep

RC

Caroline Locke, Scunthorpe

Caroline Locke brings her evocative sound and image cross-associations to Scunthorpe. Across five porthole screens, intricately rippling water is triggered into motion by sounds reminiscent of pounding heartbeats, amoebic breathing and an eerily distant foghorn. Across the gallery floor, industrially constructed tanks, collectively arranged to resemble a gothic arch, contain pools of shimmering liquid light, driven by submerged motors. A flatscreen monitor shows a tuning fork vibrating. The overall effect is to summon some kind of numinous presence lying just beyond recognition.

20-21 Visual Arts Centre, to 19 Sep

RC

Towards An Alternative History Of Graphic Design, Bexhill-on-Sea

This show of 1960s and 1970s artists’ books has plenty for print junkies. It focuses on four self-publishers: German pop artist Wolf Vostell, whose magazine Pop Und Die Folgen is packed with hectic collages of consumer culture dreams and symbols; Beau Geste Press, which spread mail art and Fluxus via art mag Schmuck; Assemblings, with its madcap mix of paper and typography; and Hansjörg Mayer’s bRIAN, influenced by the visual text games of concrete poets.

De La Warr Pavilion, to 4 Oct

SS

Holly Blakey: Some Greater Class, London

When it comes to music promos, Holly Blakey is one of the hottest young choreographers out there. She’s responsible for the statuesque silhouettes in Jessie Ware’s Night Light and the bloody-nosed lad letting rip in Young Fathers’ Shame. She has also been making headway in the art world, working with Hannah Perry on steamy, youth culture-infused performances. This Friday marks her first solo gallery effort, with dancers set to explore the territory in which she’s got plenty of expertise: pop video moves, sexualised bodies and consumerism.

Hales Gallery, E1, Fri

SS

Lucky Dragons, Southend-on-Sea

In one of the art world’s more incongruous pairings, linchpins of Los Angeles’s avant-garde music scene, art band Lucky Dragons, are staging their psychedelic, electronic experiments between the US west coast and Southend-on-Sea this summer. One half of the duo, Luke Fischbeck, has gone to work in a specially created studio-cum-project space, The Bear Pit, within the seaside town’s ground-breaking gallery Focal Point. Here, overseen by audiences from the viewing gallery, he’s working up feedback loops of images and sound sent by his bandmate Sarah Rara. Lucky Dragons aren’t the kind of laptop noiseniks who stand aloof on a stage. Their live shows have seen music improvised via the audience, hooked up with wires or playing percussive technology. You can expect both their gallery time and a special mid-residency performance next Saturday to rewrite the usual performer/spectator divide and go big on audience collaboration.

Focal Point Gallery, to 29 Aug

SS

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