New York's Winter Surf Exhibition: Rare Cars & 20th-Century Design

Nov 30, 2024 at 7:50 PM
Single Slide
In the heart of New York City, a captivating exhibition awaits those with a passion for rare cars, design, and art. The Winter Surf exhibition seamlessly blends these three elements, offering an immersive experience like no other. Inspired by the visionary mid-20th-century vehicle design, this car show, in collaboration with Meyers Manx, showcases an array of extraordinary vehicles.

Uniting Rare Cars and Art in a Winter Wonderland

Showcasing Iconic Vehicles from the 20th Century

If you're a fan of rare cars, design, or art, the Winter Surf exhibition in New York offers enough of all three. Inspired by visionary mid-20th-century vehicle design, the car show, presented in collaboration with Meyers Manx, will feature Steve McQueen’s Meyers Manx from the Thomas Crown Affair, among other vehicle icons and prototypes. The Winter Surf exhibition is taking place from December 15, 2024, to January 28, 2025, at Morton Street Partners in Manhattan. This specialist car dealership and art advisory amalgamation presents the immersive show in a gallery setting. The aim is to highlight the inventive vibe of the vehicles designed in the 1940s to the 1960s with a beach theme to offset winter during the festive season. There are some truly special pieces lined up for show visitors, including outlandish off-road prototypes, a range of unique, early-conceived dune buggies, and the major highlight, the remarkable Meyers Manx buggy that Steve McQueen drove in The Thomas Crown Affair. Viewers will appreciate the American ingenuity and European influences. The exhibition organizers, Morton Street Partners and Meyers Manx, envisioned a multi-sensory experience that showcases the engineers' craftsmanship and innovation and the risk-taking designs of the time. The show encapsulates the imaginative spirit of the time and highlights how vehicle aesthetics embodied the spirit of freedom and the notion of unbridled adventure. On the European end of the showing is a French off-road prototype called “The Shake” designed by Bertone and a fun, quirky Citroën Méhari. A 1960s Bultaco motorcycle that could be converted into a snowmobile was also secured for gallery visitors to marvel at. But it's not purely about the art. The show has another, more introspective target, and that's to stimulate thought and discussion about the effects of technology on how we interact and exist with the organic world.

The Meyers Manx: A Symbol of Adventure

The Meyers Manx, the fun and adventurous dune buggy from The Thomas Crown Affair, was developed by Bruce Meyers in 1964. Considered ground-breaking for its time, it was hailed for its superb performance and inventive conception, inspiring a new strain of “entertainment” vehicles. The Manx shot into fame as a Californian and beach icon in 1967, driven by music hotshots like Elvis Presley and The Beach Boys. It set time and speed records in the Baja 1000 race along the Baja Peninsula from California to Mexico and won the first-ever Mexican 1000 in the same year. It remained a pillar of pop culture throughout the 1960s and 1970s. Phillip Sarofim, Chairman of Meyers Manx, expressed his excitement about the show and the endurance of the brand: “The Meyers Manx has always been a symbol of joy, simplicity and purity. It’s the solution to the complexity of life. Continuing the legacy of the Meyers Manx connects us with the optimism of the 1960’s California culture, an optimism we all can share.”

Morton Street Partners: Niche Vehicle Hosts

Morton was founded by Ben Tarlow and Jake Auerbach and specializes in connecting collectors and institutions with unique and elusive automotive gems. Although Morton Street Partners doesn't operate like a traditional car dealership, they do sell cars typically in the six-figure to $2 million range. They don't operate like an art gallery either, yet they exhibit art. Examples of two of their rare finds, usually sourced from private collections, are the Dino Berlinetta Aerodinamica and Zaha Hadid’s Z car. Tarlo and Auerbach consider themselves art advisors who educate and match the buyer with the vehicle to their unique tastes. If you're in the market for a one-of-a-kind vehicle-for-art piece or just want to look at some and dream, then Morton Street Partners over the festive period is the place to go.