Sports Cars of the Future, written and illustrated by Strother MacMinn, was published in 1959 by Sports Car Press, Ltd. It is softbound, 5.25″ x 8″, 128 pages plus cover, and dedicated to John and Elaine (Bond). MacMinn was one of my Transportation Design instructors at Art Center. I remember that he bought a new blue 1970 Camaro. I had a ’70 Camaro also—a subject of another post.
There are many photos in the book of production and styling show cars from various manufacturers, renderings by Strother MacMinn of many of these cars plus several pages of his own designs. This rare, out-of-print book was loaned to me by Richard Nesbitt. Strother died in 1998.
A Man of Wit and Genius
From Coachbuilt.com. As a young boy growing up in Pasadena, California, Strother MacMinn spent every spare moment drawing pictures of cars or pestering salesmen at car dealers to share their brochures and knowledge of the treasures in their showrooms. It was on one such occasion that a kindly gentleman at the Pierce-Arrow agency provided a turn of fate for Strother by disclosing the whereabouts of a service entrance into the Walter M. Murphy Studio, where he met and became friendly with Franklin Hershey.
Franklin Hershey, one of the best designers in that custom body shop, was so taken with young Strother’s sketches that he invited him into a whole new world by having him come to his office Saturday mornings where he showed him the basics of professional body design. This friendship and guidance continued after Hershey moved to Detroit to work at GM, and throughout Strothers’ prep school, summer classes at the Art Center School in Los Angeles and high school years. It eventually led to Strother’s first working job in 1936 in the Buick studio at General Motors Art & Colour Section with Franklin Hershey as his boss.
With corporate approval from GM’s German division, Harley Earl set up a new studio in 1937. Strother MacMinn, John Coleman and George Jergenson, with Frank Hershey in charge and Hans Mersheimer of Opel as design liaison officer, were given the assignment to style the upcoming 1938 Opel Kapitan. It was an exciting enterprise because of its new approach to international styling and included advanced ideas such as built-in headlights, stretch fenders and a clean body form. (That basic model, with face-lifts, remained in production into the early fifties.)
It was with skill and enthusiasm that MacMinn participated in the development of design proposals for GM’s inter-city bus client, Greyhound Lines, Frank Springs styling department at Hudson Motors, Ed Anderson’s Oldsmobile studio, and many others on his long list of credits.
But, according to MacMinn, the best job offer anyone ever had was his part-time teaching job in 1945 at the Art Center College in the Industrial Design department. MacMinn feels nothing can compare with the excitement and stimulation of sharing enthusiasm and knowledge with dedicated, professionally oriented young design students. Perhaps that is why he has been teaching part-time for the past 41 years.
In addition he has worked independently as a designer of: aircraft seats, household products, and fiberglass boats. And as a consultant in 1979, he helped to found the first Southern California advanced concept satellite auto design studio for the Toyota Motor corporation.
Since 1953 MacMinn has written and illustrated articles for Road & Track, Motor Trend, Automobile Quarterly, and Car Graphic magazines in addition to historical catalogue essays for the “Automobile and Culture” and “Detroit Style: Automotive form 1925-1950” exhibits in Los Angeles and Detroit.
Strother MacMinn’s lifelong love of the automobile has led him to own a 1937 Cord 812 phaeton and a 1929 Rolls-Royce P-1 Derby phaeton. He kept and still drives the 1951 Jaguar XK-120 roadster that he bought for $2400 in 1953.
An excerpt from the Coachbuilt.com article about chrome
Chrome, too, can be a temptation. Cadillac introduced chrome plating in 1929 and it quickly spread throughout General Motors and then the industry. Nickel, with its lovely warm hue, had had a soft richness that was appealing, but when that super-hard blue-white of chromium came along, which needed little polishing and which seemed to last forever, nickel quickly became pass. Few owners chrome inappropriately on cars that predate 1929, but on later cars, there’s a tendancy to chrome everything, including parts such as water pipes and electrical conduits that weren’t chromed originally. Chrome wire wheels appear in such abundance today that one is tempted to think that all classic cars had plated wheels. Yes, chrome wire wheels were possible as the problems of embrittlement were solved, but they were rare.
The problem is compounded when owners add whitewalls to chrome-plated wheels. Such a combination again shouts “Look at Me” too readily. Strother MacMinn, who served as Chief Honorary Judge at Pebble Beach for twenty-five years, always maintained that a car could have chrome wheels or white sidewalls, but not both; he felt the eye was so drawn to the combination of whitewall and chrome wheel that the general line of a car, its balance as a whole, was distorted.
A great Concours d’Elegance automobile is a combination of beauty, accuracy of restoration, and an indefinable melange of “star” qualities. But above all, a car must reflect its own period, especially in matters of color and decoration. Strother MacMinn, a famous judge with strong artistic gifts, comments on taste: “Either choose chrome wire wheels or white sidewall tires but not both. Too gaudy.” He adds, “All classic cars were not red or cream!” (Two favorite colors of restorers which often show to advantage on a field). The best car may quietly state its own period with a delicate refinement, even with understated elegance, that, when new, would have reflected the buyer’s taste. Good judges will see this on the field.
So good to see Strother’s work again. In my time that was the technique he taught: black Veri-Thin pencil on vellum. He was a hero to most of us, because he knew everything about cars and the people involved.
That blue 70 1/2 Camaro that Mac had was the Camaro I found for him at a Chevy dealer near us in Hawthorne, CA. I was one of Max’s ACCD students at the time. He WANTED a triple black, RS, 350c.i./4 speed with F41 suspension. Unfortunately the Camaro/Firebird plant was having a strike so new cars were not availible.
The used, blue Camaro was a regular, 307/AT car with base suspension. However, when I told him about it, his 68 Firebird was promptly traded!
Mac, along with Ted Youngkin were-by far-the two best instructors I had at the “old” ACCD Campus. Both men were simply OUTSTANDING human beings; both personally and professionally! DFO
So much eye candy.Mr. MacMinn’s renders enhance the designs, in some cases (like the Gregoire) making the car look even better than the real thing. Thanks for sharing.
I only met Strother once.
We honored him at the very first Eyes On Design. He came out and we had a great time riding over to Gordon Beurig’s house in Grosse Pointe to pick up design work that he wanted to show. Riding with us were three students from Center For Ceative Studies.
Here we were, all designers of very different ages having a great conversation. It was very unique.
I enjoyed meeting him very much, He was quite intrigued with me as I had not gone to Art Center.
Could he ever draw.
Dick Ruzzin
Have to separate from Mr. McMinn, whose work at R&T I truly admired, but chrome wire wheels and whitewalls DO work on a lot of cars…my first ride in an E Type was a white with red upholstery/chrome wires/whitewalls car and it was magnificent. Looked a lot nicer than the revisionist cars I see today who eschew whitewalls even when a lot of cars with chrome wires were delivered with them…