Should you’ve hung out in Munich, then you definitely’ve certainly observed that the Bavarian structure, the café way of life, and even the locals really feel a bit Italian—and that’s no coincidence. You’ll be able to drive from Munich to Turin in a day. That proximity helps clarify why the golden age of Italian automobile design within the Nineteen Sixties and ’70s is so deeply entwined with BMW’s design historical past.
One of many greatest joys of researching the BMW Behind the Scenes ebook collection was uncovering the story of the Bertone Garmisch—a long-forgotten BMW idea automobile spun off from the famed Italian stylist’s proposal for what turned the unique 3 Sequence.
Now, a brand new exhibit known as Belle Macchine on the BMW Museum places you face-to-face with the Garmisch and a surprising choice of one-offs and manufacturing BMWs designed in Italy. When you’ve got even a passing curiosity in Italian automotive design, Belle Macchine is an unmissable addition to the world’s prime automobile exhibitions.
Contained in the Belle Macchine Exhibit on the BMW Museum
BMW Traditional has gone all-in right here. They’ve reimagined the spiral walkway contained in the Museum’s iconic “Granola Bowl” with projected visuals and ambient music that—not like Vegas—tastefully units the tone for the featured vehicles. Many previous displays on this area have been worthy, however admittedly just a little dry. Not this one. It has all of the spectacle of the Bellagio however with extra cultural weight.
The exhibition took years of preparation, with BMW Traditional collaborating intently with BMW Design to pick and place the vehicles. The payoff is evident. Take the Italdesign Ace of Hearts, for instance—on mortgage from Volkswagen, who now owns the famed design home. Simply steps away is the Nazca present automobile—a wildly futuristic proposal for a modern-day BMW M1. It sits a brief stroll up the spiral ramp from the Italdesign-built BMW M1 itself, and close by, the M1 Hommage ties the previous and future collectively. That’s the genius of the structure: these vehicles are organized in a method that lets guests discover their relationships via proximity and context.
Naturally, the vehicles are the celebrities—however the exhibition’s actual power lies in the way it educates with out overwhelming. It opens by explaining the broader affect of Italian design, from trend to product design, so even those that don’t reside and breathe vehicles can join the dots. Many guests will race up the ramp to get to the {hardware}, however they shouldn’t. Early within the exhibit, a well-crafted introduction presents the seven Italian design studios that formed BMW’s historical past: Bertone, Pininfarina, Michelotti, Touring, Frua, Italdesign, and Zagato. This context makes it simpler to understand who did what—and when.
I’ve seen many exhibitions within the Granola Bowl over the a long time, however that is simply probably the most compelling. The steadiness of storytelling and aesthetics invitations you to linger over the 20+ vehicles on show, soaking of their presence with no need to slog via paragraphs of textual content. As a substitute, you get simply sufficient to grasp—and then you definitely’re free to get pleasure from.
Showstoppers: Nazca, Garmisch, and the Ace of Hearts
Among the many highlights:
- The Italdesign Nazca M12, a priceless proposal for a future BMW M1. Guests strolling the spiral path can cease simply inches away from its wild, wedge-shaped bodywork.
- The BMW 328 Touring Coupé, which received the Mille Miglia, is positioned reverse a 2006 idea automobile designed by Anders Warming, who as soon as led MINI and Rolls-Royce design and now heads BMW’s superior design staff.
- The Italdesign Ace of Diamonds, a really ’70s idea based mostly on the BMW 320i, reveals Giugiaro’s effort to court docket BMW shortly after his success with the VW Golf and Fiat Uno.
- A yellow E12 5 Sequence, initially styled by Marcello Gandini at Bertone and later completed by French design icon Paul Bracq, sits subsequent to a blue first-gen 3 Sequence. Close by is the one-off BMW 3200 CS Convertible, constructed by Bertone and offered to main BMW shareholder Herbert Quandt.
Italy and Munich could also be separated by the Alps, however in BMW’s design DNA, they’re perpetually linked. Belle Macchine is a standout exhibit that lastly provides that relationship its second within the highlight. And sure, admittance is free along with your BMW Museum ticket.
Having written about these vehicles within the BMW Behind the Scenes trilogy, I really feel like I’m visiting outdated buddies—a few of which I by no means anticipated to fulfill once more in individual. Belle Macchine provides guests the prospect to understand them not simply in pictures or on the printed web page, however of their full three-dimensional, sculptural glory. It’s greater than a show—it’s a celebration.
BMWBLOG Readers Supply
Get $45 off the ultimate 100 copies of Steve Saxty’s BMW Behind the Scenes 3-book collector’s set. Use the code BLOG45 at stevesaxty.com