Les corvettes oubliées


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dans les coulisses , une collection de Corvette oubliées ............................................

 

http://speedsociety.com/vh-1-giveaway-corvettes-left-rot-restoration-way/

 

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After a 25-year slumber, the VH1 / Peter Max Corvettes resurface

Kurt Ernst Oct 24th, 2014 at 8am | 112 comments

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The Peter Max Corvettes in the summer of 2014. Photos by Richard Prince, courtesy of Richard Prince Photography.

In 1990, a Long Island carpenter by the name of Dennis Amadeo won the prize of a lifetime for a Corvette fan: one of every year Corvette built from 1953 through 1989, courtesy of music television network VH1. Artist Peter Max soon acquired the cars for an ambitious art project that never materialized, and for 25 years the cars sat, largely ignored and only occasionally moved from one New York City storage location to another, until a New York Corvette fan and automotive consultant helped broker a deal to buy the cars. Now, thanks to their new owners, 36 pieces of Corvette history will soon be back on the road, and if all goes as planned, back on the market.

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The story begins in 1989, when a television producer named Jim Cahill pitched an idea to the music network VH1 to boost its sagging ratings, particularly among baby boomers. A Corvette fan himself, Cahill suggested the network hold a contest to award one lucky winner 36 Chevrolet Corvettes, one from every year of manufacture up to the date of the contest.

The idea was given the green light, and as Sam Smith related in a 2010 Jalopnik article, Cahill spent $610,000 amassing the collection, which consisted largely of “driver” quality cars. Fourteen of the Corvettes were convertibles, and over 2/3 came equipped with automatic transmissions, yet that did little to diminish the appeal of the contest. To cover its costs, VH1 set up a 900 number, and entrants were charged $2.00 per call, of which the network received $1.49. In less than two weeks, it had recovered the full cost of staging the giveaway.

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The paper taped to the side of the car was a color swatch test by Peter Max.

Amadeo, who’d placed just a single phone call, was the lucky winner, and the network spared no expense in making the presentation as theatrical as possible. Beach Boy Mike Love was on hand to pass Amadeo a big bag of keys, and ample video of the winner, his wife and their new baby was shot for promotional purposes. When the festivities were over, Amadeo returned to Long Island to await the delivery of his Corvettes.

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Which is when Amadeo received a phone call from Peter Max, who requested a New York City meeting to discuss a deal to buy the cars. As Max explained to New York magazine in 2005, “I’m not a car guy. I never drive,” so his interest in the cars was solely from a self-promotional point of view. Max had first seen the collection at a 1990 auto show, and was struck with the vision of painting all the cars in bold, psychedelic colors.

The morning after the VH1 giveaway, Max was awakened by a phone call from a friend, advising him that the cars had been given to a carpenter from Long Island. After hanging up the phone, the artist drifted back to sleep, only to have a vivid dream of the Corvettes driving onto a football field, cheerleaders standing atop them, while a man behind Max ate a hot dog with yellow mustard. In the world of the artist, truth really is stranger than fiction.

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Inspired, Max arranged the meeting with Amadeo, who opened the discussion by asking $1.5 million for the collection. Max countered, and eventually the pair settled on a deal that may still have repercussions: Amadeo received $250,000 in cash, $250,000 in Peter Max artwork and an agreement that if Max sold the collection at a future date, Amadeo would get a portion of the proceeds, up to an agreed upon cap of $1 million.

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For two and a half decades, that’s more or less where the story ended. From time to time, articles would crop up on the internet about the Peter Max Corvettes (particularly when they were moved from one location to another), but Max showed no interest in selling, restoring, or even maintaining the cars.

As late as 2010, he still seemed determined to do something with the cars, and even spoke of acquiring 14 more to bring the total number up to 50, making it complete through the 2003 model year. It never happened, and every year saw the Corvettes piled higher with dust.

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Fast-forward to June of 2014. Corvette collector and Dream Car Consulting founder Chris Mazzilli was showing his 1971 Corvette at the Old Westbury Gardens car show, when, as Chris told us, “This guy walks up and starts asking me questions about values and restoration costs on a series of Corvettes. At one point I stopped him and said, ‘You’re talking about the Peter Max Corvettes, aren’t you?’”

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The guy was Peter Heller, and he was indeed speaking of the Peter Max Corvettes. As The New York Times related in a recent article, Heller had been approached by Max to find a new storage garage for the cars, and the conversation soon turned to the possibility of Heller buying the cars from Max.

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After their chance meeting at the Westbury Gardens show, Heller asked Chris to inspect the Corvettes, and restorer Dave Weber (whose shop, Vintage Automotive Restorations, specializes in Corvettes and muscle cars) accompanied him to the New York City garage. A Saturday full of research later, Chris laid out the good, the bad and the ugly for Heller and his brother, giving them and their partners, the Spindler family, a value range for the cars. Chris told us that the Corvettes were purchased “in this range,” but wouldn’t elaborate on a more precise number to protect his clients.

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Chris’ assessment of the cars matches that of Cahill from 25 years earlier. When new, the vast majority of the cars were, at best, driver quality, and time has not been kind to many of the cars in the collection. Some, like the 1974 and 1984 models, make no financial sense to restore, as their resale value wouldn’t approach the cost of restoration. Some are hidden gems, like the numbers-matching 1953 Corvette that Chris pegs as a late-production car. Others, like the numbers-matching 1957 or the Cascade Green 1956 (which lacks its original drivetrain), required little more than elbow grease to become, in Chris’ words, “gorgeous cars.”

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While none of the cars sport a big-block engine or come with rare and desirable options, all have merit as pieces of Corvette history wrapped up in a bit of urban legend, tied to an artist that once captured the zeitgeist of an era.

Chris tells us that all of the Corvettes, regardless of their value, will be reconditioned to make them mechanically sound and as presentable as possible. As for long-term plans, the Hellers and the Spindlers would prefer to sell the cars in a single lot to an interested collector, though Chris recognizes this is a long shot. “We haven’t started talking to auctions just yet,” he said, “but it probably makes the most sense to offer the cars through a Mecum, Barrett-Jackson or Russo and Steele sale.” From a financial perspective, he’s right, but from an emotional perspective, who wouldn’t want to see these Cor

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quel malheur..dommage de laisser ainsi des bijoux pareils.. :angry: si il faut a la main je les pousse pour partir avec ...

chacun son délire...mais m...e une caisse c'est fait pour rouler et être bichonner surtout ces bêtes là ,

histoire de thune...mais certainement pas de passionné !!

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Au contraire, elles se sont fait moins de mal ou elles sont plutôt que dans la cour de Kévin et Jacky, après être passées entre les mains de 35 propriétaires.

 

Moi ce qui me chagrine plus c'est que ces survivors qui n'auraient certainement besoin que d'un puissant redémarrage et d'un bon coup de detailing vont être totalement restaurés, et au passage perdre toute leur âme. C'est pas maintenant qu'elles vont retrouver la route, rassures-toi...les gars qui iront dans 6 mois chez Mecum taper 250K$ le bout c'est pas dans le but de rouler, c'est pour spéculer et s'astiquer le manque dans un showroom chauffé entre deux poules de luxe.

 

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  • Il y a 2 semaines...
  • Il y a 1 mois ...

C'est marrant, je lis toujours le même discours que ce soit sur ce sujet ou celui de la collection Baillon et même sur d'autres forum. Le mec qui entasse des caisses est invariablement un co**ard, une enflure,.... et j'en passe pas mal. Et ne parlons pas de ceux qui ont de l'argent, là ce ne sont que des spéculateurs.

 

C'est un discours que j'ai tenu pendant un temps mais il change tout doucement d'orientation. Finalement tout le monde est libre de faire ce qu'il veut. Alors si le plaisir est d'entasser des caisses ou de 'en faire une oeuvre d'art... pourquoi pas! Et même s'astiquer la nouille dans un showroom chauffé. Ce n'est pas mon problème.

 

Je suis quand même curieux de savoir ce que vous penser de moi et de mon petits stock personnel tiens. Je sens qu'on va se marrer!

 

 

EDIT: M'en vouler pas de ma mauvaise humeur mais je me suis pris le choux avec un pseudo amateur sur un autre forum. Le mec ne comprenait pas ma philosophie. Comment lui faire comprendre que j'en ai pas pas? J'entasse c'est tout!

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