The Greatest Ever Porsche Art Cars

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Ten of the very best Porsche art cars from the past six decades.

The idea of incorporating art into the design of a sports car is something drawn up decades ago, with artists like Andy Warhol making his mark on iconic vehicles like the BMW M1. Porsche is known for having an artistic take on its fleet of vintage and modern performance-focused sports cars, which opens up the opportunity for unique artistic collaborations. Over the past six decades, the automotive community has seen some of the most head-turning Porsche examples from world-renowned artists that play key roles in the world of art. Porsche is pleased to put together a list of the greatest Porsche art cars ever created featuring an array of models and artistic styles. Click the link below to view all of the current Porsche models for sale on duPont REGISTRY.

968 L’ART by L’Art de L’Automobile

Porsche

Embodying the connection between vehicles and fashion, this outstanding redesigned car – the brainchild of L’Art de L’Automobile’s founder Arthur Kar – transports a retro look to the modern era. Unveiled at Paris Fashion Week in 2021 alongside a matching capsule collection, attendees saw the worlds of fashion, art and cars collide to mark the 30th anniversary of the 968. The 968 L’ART blazes to life in stunning Green Pearl, with the added mystique of appearing to be three other hues, depending on which angle you view it from. TAG Heuer has created a matching chronograph to go with it. Additionally, the roof has been removed and RECARO seats have been added, which incorporate graphic leather in the centre panel that matches the exterior colour. A custom-designed audio system by BOSE has also been installed and the headlights have been elevated with chrome. They are just a few of the examples of how Arthur used inspiration from the classic cars he and his team love to transform it into a contemporary statement.


Taycan Art Car by Richard Phillips

Porsche

This is the kind of artwork that makes watching paint dry a legitimately fun pastime, thanks to acclaimed American artist Richard Phillips breathing his vision into this artful second skin for the all-electric Taycan. It bloomed to life in Zurich, created live at the Leuehof pop-up restaurant on Zurich’s Bahnhofstrasse in December 2020. To create the final masterpiece, Phillips applied his 2010 painting, Queen of the Night, onto the body of a Porsche Taycan 4S, where the lush piece spreads its leafy and floral arrangement from the front hood to the rear. Inspired by the beauty of the natural environment in conjunction with the sweeping silhouette of the car, Phillips succeeded in giving this electric star a brush with nature. Earlier this year it was auctioned off, with all proceeds being donated to a non-profit organisation, Suisseculture Sociale, which supports artists hit hard by the pandemic.


Taycan Art Car by Dale Chihuly

Porsche

Another electrifying artwork also sparked to life in 2021. The horticultural oasis of Singapore’s Gardens by the Bay not only plays host to a diverse collection of over 1.5 million plants but became the temporary home for this petal-adorned Taycan. With Porsche as the official automotive partner for American glass artist Dale Chihuly’s Glass in Bloom exhibition, audiences were exposed to the idea of sports cars beyond the stereotypical need for speed. Wrapped in an unmissable livery from Chihuly’s Persians series – comprising of ultra-bright flowers in a diverse palette – the car was more than a match for its foliage-laced surroundings. Sitting pretty on a pedestal, set against the futuristic backdrop of the SG50 Lattice – an award-winning pavilion that shows what highly innovative and sustainable architecture of the future could look like – it provided a harmonious reflection of the future-forward DNA of the sustainable Porsche Taycan, all amid an organic green oasis.


911 Carrera by Nelson Makamo

Porsche

Famed South African artist Nelson Makamo always knew he would own a Porsche, but what he didn’t expect was the manner in how it happened. Having fantasised since his childhood about what it would feel like to hold the keys to one, it was a serendipitous acquaintance with a modern-day example of one during a residency in Western Cape that reignited his Porsche dream. It cemented his commitment to eventually own a Jet Black Metallic 911 Carrera. Makamo ordered his first ever Porsche with the view to putting his mark on his most unusual canvas yet. His Porsche art car saw him hand painting a number of its elements, from the rear bumper to seat mouldings, door panel inserts to side mirror covers. Look closely enough and you’ll find three letters – ‘Mma’ – in the left door panel insert, meaning ‘mother’ in his native tongue, Sepedi. For Makamo, the art car in its entirety is reflection of his success, the important people he’s met along the way and his hope that his work will spark the imagination of children all over the continent of Africa.


Janis Joplin’s 356 SC by Dave Richards

Porsche

Rock legend Janis Joplin may have sung, “My friends all drive Porsches,” but she in fact owned quite a number herself. She bought this car in 1968 in Dolphin Grey (one of just nine colours available at the time) using it as an everyday driver, one that fans would soon come to recognise as one of her closest companions. Describing the 1964 356 SC as having a colourful paint job is somewhat of an understatement. Janis paid her roadie, Dave Richards, $500 to portray The History of the Universe on the car in almost every hue possible.It was a history that included images of her band, Big Brother and the Holding Company, Californian landscapes, the eye of God, Capricorn, skulls, mushrooms and much more. The result is a vehicle that screams to be seen. It became so synonymous with its owner that fans would leave notes to her under the windscreen wipers. When it was stolen in 1969, the thief tried to hide his crime by spray painting over the giveaway mural, only to be caught by police. Luckily, Richards was able to remove the offending paint with only minor damage to the artwork. Tragically, Joplin died in 1970 at the age of 27, just two years after purchasing the car. Her beloved Porsche eventually found its way into the hands of her siblings, with her brother Michael restoring it to its original Dolphin Grey condition, as it had deteriorated. Then, in the 1990s, it was decided to return it to psychedelic glory, with her family commissioning artists Jana Mitchell and Amber Owen to replicate the earlier mural. After doing the rounds at museums for decades, it was finally put up for auction to support charities in their sister’s name. The price? An astonishing $1.76 million – breaking all records for the sale of any Porsche 356 at public auction. For that you get one of the original – in more ways than one – Porsche art cars.


Crystal-eroded 911 by Daniel Arsham

Porsche

Contemporary visual artist Daniel Arsham is known for breathing life into inanimate objects and playing with deconstructed futurism. Sketching pictures of Porsche cars since childhood, creating this one-off, crystal-eroded 911 (992) in 2019 interlaced some of his own story with that of the Porsche brand. The dystopian look was achieved by embedding crystals into the car’s body, creating a vehicle that wouldn’t be out of place if you happened to stumble across it in a post-apocalyptic world. The drivable piece was displayed at Selfridges in London in 2019 before setting off on a tour of Asia. With contemporary objects subject to transience, says Arsham, this unique piece evokes a sense of deterioration juxtaposed with decadence.


911 RSR Le Mans by Richard Phillips

Porsche

This Porsche 911 RSR is more than just a work of art. It also became the first Porsche art car to win at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, when it won the GTE Am class in 2019. Its existence is the result of a firm friendship between artist, Richard Phillips, and Porsche factory driver, Jörg Bergmeister, which had already seen Richard design a helmet in 2013. It proved to be a stepping stone, six years later, to designing this Porsche art car, when the artist used some of his existing work to project an intricate 2D livery onto the car. The oversized details and bold contrasting colours meant there was no need to have a grandstand view to take in the full design – spectators could more than follow it from afar (and it, them, thanks to the pair of ‘eyes’ painted on its flank). This 911 RSR is one for both the art and history books.


1970 911 S by Ornamental Conifer

Porsche

Cars, clothes, even crockery – British-born, Californian-based artist Nico Sclater (aka Ornamental Conifer) has wonderful freehand typography for them all. And of all those he has painted on, Porsche cars are up there with the most noteworthy. Ornamental Conifer’s artwork can be recognised through his signature combination of Pop Art-esque signwriting, shot through with humour, and combined with a clever use of word play and turns of phrase (phrases referred to as ‘Coniferisms’ by the man himself). A trio of Porsche cars have been graced with his style to date: a 1977 911 rebuilt to resemble a 1974 Carrera 3.0 RS, a 935 showcased at Las Vegas’ SEMA Auto Show, and this, the very first Ornamental Conifer Porsche art car. Designed for a client in Texas, the message on this 911 S is a bold and free one. ‘Stay forever far out’.


911 Fat Car NFT by Erwin Wurm

Porsche

Austrian sculpture and painter Erwin Wurm is known for his larger-than-life artworks – his collection of Fat Sculptures span the subject areas of houses and cars for two decades. On the landmark of the 20th anniversary of his iconic Fat Car in 2021, Wurm’s quirkiness came to the fore once more to breathe life into – literally – his first NFT, entitled ‘Breathe in, breathe out’. The video showcases his interpretation of what it would look like if a 911 inhaled in and out. Already well-known for his eccentric depictions of everyday life, and with a signature nudge and a wink as he takes a sideways look at consumer society, the disfigured style on show here is an example of Wurm’s inimitable style.


911 Carrera type 996 by Biggibilla

Porsche

This 911 Carrera (996) art car was painstakingly hand-painted in 1998 at the Porsche Centre Melbourne showroom by Indigenous Australian artist, Graham J Rennie (aka Biggibilla). It was created to celebrate 50 years since the first vehicle that bore the Porsche name – the aluminium prototype known as ‘No 1’ – and is adorned with Australian animals like the duck-billed platypus.


Source: Porsche

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