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Distributed for Dalton Watson Fine Books

Jacques Saoutchik, Maître Carrossier

1948 Talbot-Lago Grand Sport Chassis 110101

New edition

A tribute to the Talbot-Lago Grand Sport coupé chassis 110101 that was the undisputed star of the 1948 Paris Salon de l’Automobile.

On October 7, 1948, when the Paris Salon de l’Automobile opened its doors in the Grand Palais just off the Champs-Élysées, it was to a world of postwar austerity. Yet despite the hardship, the great coachbuilders were out in force: Figoni et Falaschi, Pourtout, Franay, Chapron, and others showed elegant machinery that everyone wanted, but hardly any could afford.

Like some supernova, the undisputed Star of the Salon blazed on the stand of the Carrosserie de Luxe, Jacques Saoutchik. The presentation was a series of firsts: Saoutchik had taken stand no. 1, the first on the left as one entered the Grand Palais. Placed on this stand was chassis 110101, the first Talbot-Lago T26 Grand Sport chassis made. The voluptuous Saoutchik body it wore was a first showing, a world premiere of its design, a dazzling fastback coupé that would become the “signature” body style for the Grand Sport chassis. A total of six of these coupés were built, none completely alike.

The design was an elaborate interactive flow of alluring, gorgeous yet delicate curves—as close to the essence of an automobile-as-sculpture as any carrosserie has conceived in the history of automotive design. The Saoutchik fastback coupé is therefore justly regarded as a chef-d'œuvre of postwar French car design and it is one of the most sensational, stunning, and appealing bodies ever created by the Carrosserie de Luxe, Jacques Saoutchik.

The unique livery on the car was no less audacious—a daring paint scheme that blended a pastel mint green body color with chocolate brown fender panels, matching brown wire wheels, and a grille with alternating green and brown vertical stripes. Add to this an interior in dark blue and azure leather that featured instrument bezels and fixtures plated in 24-carat gold. One would have thought it would all clash horrendously. Not so. As with the complex and sinuous curvatures of the metalwork where Pierre Saoutchik had achieved harmony out of seeming chaos, this courageous array of colors miraculously melded into a greater whole where the sum was much greater than its parts.

This glamorous automobile is the subject matter of this book. Its complete history is told in detail and copiously illustrated with period and modern high-quality images. There is a detailed discussion of the development of the T26 Grand Sport, its chassis, engine, and gearbox. And not least, a comprehensive study of the postwar Paris Salons, illustrated with remarkable period images in full color, taken by the famous photographer Yale Joel who worked for LIFE magazine and captured the compelling atmosphere of the 1948 Salon in all its glory. In addition, the forensic seven-year restoration of the car is covered in depth.

For the duration of the 1948 show, multitudes passed by and were swept off their feet by the almost carnal voluptuousness of this Saoutchik Talbot-Lago, as their drab postwar austerity garments provided a grim counterpoint, all the while highlighting that despite the years of privation inflicted by the War, refinement, elegance, and sophistication remained alive and well in the world. Chassis 110101 was the Star, the Vedette, of the Salon. It was the stuff that dreams are made of, a truly overpowering car. Everything else at the Salon came in second. And second, is everything that is not first. Simple as that.
 

328 pages | 192 color plates, 46 halftones, 26 line drawings | 8.62 x 11.97 | © 2024

History: General History

Transportation: Automotive


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Table of Contents

PreamblePage 16
AcknowledgementsPage 20
Prelude: An OverturePage 21
Chapter 1: The Development of the Talbot-Lago T26 Grand SportPage 38
First Interlude: Lights, Camera…Page 61
Chapter 2: La Carrosserie de Luxe Jacques SaoutchikPage 106
Second Interlude: Beauty and the BeastPage 119
Chapter 3: Talbot-Lago and the Postwar Salon de l’AutomobilePage 136
Third Interlude: Rolling SculpturePage 163
Chapter 4: The History and Style of 1948 Talbot-Lago T26 Grand Sport Chassis 110101Page 184
Fourth Interlude: A Walk in the ParkPage 209
Chapter 5: The Restoration of 1948 Talbot-Lago T26 Grand Sport Chassis 110101Page 228
Fifth Interlude: I’m Ready for my Close-upPage 269
Appendix 1: Other T26 Grand Sports Built by SaoutchikPage 300
Appendix 2: Other T26 Grand Sport Designs by SaoutchikPage 312
BibliographyPage 324
Author BiographiesPage 330
Last Interlude: Rolling Sculpture – RevisitedPage 331
IndexPage 346
CodaPage 351

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