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100 Years Of Bicycle Posters, Jack Rennert (1973)
Hart-Davis MacGibbon 0 246 107774 X Folio 112pp £2.75
An arresting collection of colour reproductions of cycling posters,
mainly from the early years of the twentieth century, with a perceptive
introduction and notes on each plate

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Published on the centenary of both off-set lithography and the bicycle,
this collection celebrates a unique moment in the evolution of modern
culture. Bicycles were the fastest individual means of transport from
their inception until the arrival of the motor car. And inexpensive colour
printing helped to create unprecedented mass markets for consumer products
- such as bicycles.
Both were helped along by an artistic blossoming, the products of which
- posters - appeared in streets and in shops across the developed world.
Bicycles provided newfound access to the wider world: printing brought
a galaxy of vivid imagery to public spaces. The internet has revolutionised
access to information and experience. Yet that change looks positively
restrained compared to the rush of new experience that technological innovation
provided in the last half of the nineteenth century.
These posters - many of which can be seen on a Flikr
site - provide a slideshow of imagery of enormous beauty, and commercial
power. The threads running though them are the feeling of speed, freedom
and liberation that they arrestingly convey. Indeed, few of the artists
dwell on the bicycles themselves very much at all: selling the sizzle
not the sausage - as copywriters are taught.
Women are also a recurring motif. Sex sells, then as now - and never
more effectivley than H Gray's poster for Sirius Bicycles. In it a pert
cyclist's negligee appears to have become enmeshed in the spokes thereby
rendering her all but naked as she pedals into the sky.
It is tempting to think, however, that the representations of women
here represent slightly more than the tits and bums school of salesmanship.
Two-wheeled transports to freedom were adopted as readily by women as
men, if not more so. And while advertisers models of the 1890s seem to
have been particularly unlucky in respect of their clothes and the spokes
of their mounts, it is a glamorous, happy, liberated vision of women that
shines through.
This book is long out of print - indeed, it is surprising that it has
not been reissued. Its
author is now the president of the International
Poster Centre in New York, and writes an entertaining
blog on the organisation's site, in which he occaisionally returns
to the subject of cycling posters.
Perhaps the second-hand prices that this volume now attracts will persuade
him to roll the litho once more.
PS June 09
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