Mini
by Richard Reeve
Title
Mini
Artist
Richard Reeve
Medium
Photograph - Graphic Art
Description
Mini - Richard Reeve
There was a time when I was younger, back in the UK, that just about everyone had owned a mini at some point. They were everywhere. A small car designed to fit in a 10ft x 4ft x 4ft space, carry 4 people at highway speeds and sip fuel.
Following his success with the iconic Morris Minor, Sir Alec Issigonis' design was an instant hit in 1959 and remained in production, largely unchanged until 2000. Over 5.3 million units were made and it became a British icon along side Big Ben and the Union Jack.
MEANING of the piece:
The Mini is one of the most iconic images of post-war Britain. It symbolizes the swinging 60's: Carnaby Street, youth culture, rock & roll, sexual liberation, and freedom for the common people. What could be more British that that? Well, it was designed by a Greek refugee, Alexander "Alec" Issigonis, later knighted for his engineering /design work. Alec fled with his family from Smryna in Greece (now called Izmir in Turkey) during the Greco-Turkish war of 1919-1922.
My point of designing this piece was to bring to the fore the concept that we are all one people and you cannot predict who will do what for whom.
In these days of vitriolic rhetoric aimed at the sea of refugees fleeing the Middle East, this is something we should reflect upon perhaps...
Uploaded
November 18th, 2015
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Viewed 2,624 Times - Last Visitor from Fairfield, CT on 04/19/2024 at 10:26 AM
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Comments (1)
Meg Shearer
Always wanted one and still do. Wonderful design and I love the black and red! L/F!
Richard Reeve replied:
Thank you, Meg. The Mini was a really fun car to drive when young, but very much "of the time"