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An art car is a vehicle that has its appearance modified as an act of personal artistic expression.
Art cars are public and mobile expressions of the artistic need to create. In creating an art car, the
Built on an international harvester pickup truck as a community project during Reno, Nevada's Reno Days event. Features a "supercharger" on the hood which is actually the motor head unit from a Kirby Sani-Tronic vacuum cleaner. Now owned and driven by Patrick Dailey of Novato, California, who states: " Wherever we go people are always trying to give us more junk to put on it." and "...we hardly ever have to buy our own gas."
A van entirely covered with photographic and videocameras and featuring a video display. This vehicle has the distinction of being one of the few works of art that actually looks back at the viewer, as it photographs and videotapes them using some of the cameras mounted upon it, and has the ability to play the video back on the external screen, allowing you to watch it - watching you as you are watching it watch you.
A Volkswagen Beetle with the California license plate OMYGAWD, which features exotic plastic fruits and vegetables, a world globe and the phrase "Oh my God" painted in dozens of languages.
Whose "touch tone phone" design completely disguises it's origin as a Volkswagen Beetle. It looks like a giant red phone, complete with handset and 'twisty phone cord'
This art car is a motorcycle which appears to be a guitar, and is used as a promotional tool to help raise money, for a charity that buys guitars for young music students that need them.
A car that looks like a Buck Rogers style art deco rocket ship, complete with a gauge-filled cockpit interior which appears to be suitable for a jet aircraft.
The day-glo painted schoolbus is a 'remake' of the original bus known as "Furthur" (the original) which is the actual real-life Merry Pranksters' hippie bus whose destination sign read simply "Furthur" and which "tootled the multitudes" in 1964 in 'real life' and inTom Wolfe's book The Electric Kool Aid Acid Test The bus is also prominently mentioned in the Grateful Dead's song "(That's it for) The Other One", as "the bus to never-ever land" with "...Cowboy Neal (Neal Cassady) at the wheel...".
Mankind's fascination with decorating our vehicles probably predates the custom of Roman charioteers to adorn their vehicles with objects of a personal nature.
A well known early art car used for commercial advertisement was the Oscar Meyer Wienie Wagon - Later versions were known as the Oscar Meyer Wienermobile. These were schoolbus-sized vehicles styled to appear as a hot dog on a bun.