Go Back   The Supercar Registry > Dealer Specific Discussion > Baldwin-Motion Performance


 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
  #1  
Old 09-16-2007, 07:25 AM
Dog427435's Avatar
Dog427435 Dog427435 is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Holbrook, NY
Posts: 3,368
Thanks: 7
Thanked 75 Times in 34 Posts
Default KO-MOTION - Astoria Chas

[b] If anyone has not heard, there is an exhibit that started today in NYC examining
the life and death of KO-Motion's owner Charlie "Astoria Chas" Snyder .
It is a work of Collier Schorr, Marty Schorr's daughter.
It looks interesting and worth a trip into the City!
-
-
This article is in this weeks Old Cars Weekly
-
-

-
-
This is an excerpt from her press release
-
-

The exhibition There I Was, by Collier Schorr, looks to America and specifically the muscle car
counter culture of the 1960s in Long Island and Queens, NY.
This history is related through the short but spectacular life of charismatic 21-year-old
drag car racer Charlie "Astoria Chas” Synder and his '67 "Ko-Motion" Corvette. At the age of 5
Schorr accompanied her father Martyn Schorr, a photographer
and journalist to a local racetrack where she watched Astoria Chas work on his car.
A subsequent article followed in CARS Magazine, with the now eerie headline
“While Astoria Chas is doing his thing in Vietnam his friends are racing his L-88."
By the time the article was published Charlie had already been killed overseas.
There I Was is Snyder's story and Schorr's dilemma. He was there; she was not.
The project examines the role of the photograph as proof of the photographer's presence,
territory and view and the difficulty of representing any past without the theatricality of
re-staging it. Using a collision of source materials for the drawings beginning with her father's
images and Snyder's own snapshots taken in Vietnam, Schorr then draws from
“professional” reportage pictures, so as to describe, literally sketch out, one monumental trip
from Queens, NY to Vietnam and back. Thus conjuring up an expressionistic portrait of the
dichotomies of late-1960s America.
These dichotomies are echoed in the formal tropes the work bounces between, from gestural
strokes to hard-edged, almost woodcut-like pencil renderings depending on the tone and
subject matter of the pictures.

Machine Gun Dedication,an image of a buddy posing for Snyder, contrasts a drawing of a
blissful Snyder, posing for the artist’s father, reaching into the engine compartment of his racecar.
Drawing K, in which an unknown figure is frantic, wearing a blood-splattered shirt, foreshadows
the portrait of a uniformed Snyder fresh from jump school and visiting his mother’s candy store
in Astoria, NY. These discordant frictions between pain and bravado and tranquility and chaos
add up to a complex and multi-faceted portrait of escape, culture, dreams and mortality in a
fractured wartime America.
-
-

-

-

-
-
__________________
Reply With Quote
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Dog427435 For This Useful Post:
PeteLeathersac (12-07-2021), SS427 (11-06-2018)
Attachments - The Supercar Registry komotionfsale.jpg
Click here to view all the pictures posted in this thread...
 


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 02:30 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.