Concours d'Elegance now available

by Patrick Lesueur and translated by David Burgess-Wise

ISBN 978-1-85443-250-6         Publication Date August 2011 Page Size 290 mm x 240 mm. 208 pages. Hard cover with dust jacket.   Illustrations 200 black and white photographs. Price US$69/£42

Surely no form of contest has ever equalled the marriage of luxury and ostentation offered for many years by the great concours d’élégance. Elitist perhaps but their sheer magnificence seems just as fascinating in our present world as it did in the first half of the 20th Century. It should be remembered that these events allowed the most celebrated artists and artisans boundless freedom of expression. Everything was put into the melting-pot to achieve one end – the realisation of a dream

 

The vital step for organisers of such events was to choose a venue famous  for its air of leisurely hedonism, such as Longchamp, Deauville, Cannes, La Baule, Vichy, Nice or Enghien, where costly automobiles, their elegant silhouettes crafted by the great names of  contemporary coachwork , could parade. To enhance the atmosphere, these exotic creations were presented by pretty ladies, mostly recruited from fashionable society, dressed in the latest fashion by the leading Parisian couturiers in an attempt to achieve the best possible symbiosis with the machines that they accompanied.

Without wishing to diminish the important role played in the spectacle by these actors, it was of course the aristocratic automobiles that the eager spectators had come to admire.

This book offers a delicious journey back in time to witness the golden age of the concours d’élégance.

Over fifty coachbuilders covered in the book from Antem to Weymann.