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Folks Of Interest Dave Bell

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by SUNROOFCORD, May 1, 2012.

  1. PDQ36
    Joined: Jun 6, 2006
    Posts: 72

    PDQ36
    Member

    This is such terrible news. Dave is a fantastic chap with a real gift. We finally met him in '95 and I have drawings from him of every car we've built since then and he was good enough to feature us in his HH drawings a couple of times. He loved to receive newspapers or magazines from the UK and he's a big 'Eastenders' fan.
    This is truly a sad, sad, time and I find it difficult to respond to the news, I have & will forever strive to make my cars look like his drawings.
    My thoughts and prayers are with Dave and his family at this time.
     
    Last edited: May 2, 2012
  2. Jeff Norwell
    Joined: Aug 20, 2003
    Posts: 14,848

    Jeff Norwell
    MODERATOR
    Staff Member

    Another true original.... grew up on his work.
    I am sad.
     
  3. Jeff Norwell
    Joined: Aug 20, 2003
    Posts: 14,848

    Jeff Norwell
    MODERATOR
    Staff Member

    Here is a interview...1998....gives some insight to the great fella he is.... down to earth and wonderful.
    Dave....I sure wish I could shake your hand..........





    Dave Bell is a pioneer in the field of Automotive Art. His works have spanned nearly 50 years and have appeared on tee shirts, posters, cars,trucks, motorcycles and in hundreds of magazines across the globe. His love of cars and motorcycles, combined with a genius ability to draw, has made Bell a favoritte among car/truck/cycle enthusiasts and artists of all ages. His work can be seen monthly in Street Rodder &Custom Rodder magazines.

    He also makes guest appearances at car shows across the country. Fortunate visitors are treated to a sketch, a signed print, good conversation or simply an opportunity to watch him draw. I had the pleasure of spending time with Dave, during his busy weekend- at the Detroit AutoRama and he was gracious enough to give me this interview.



    DAVE BELL INTERVIEW 2/98:



    MARK: Can you tell me little about yourself? Where were you born?

    BELL: Well I was born in Southern Minnesota, 1939. I grew up a fairly normal kid, I guess. My parents were not artistic, particularly but my Father had a sister, who passed away in her early 30's and she was artistic. I think that was where I got the desire to draw.

    MARK: Maybe genetics played a role?

    BELL: It's a good possibility. I had an Aunt who was a former school teacher and she would sit with me at my blackboard, when I was about 5 and we would draw little cars. Two circles, a straight line would make the running boards and we were off to drawing cars.

    MARK: So cars were some of the first things you started drawing then ?

    BELL: I think there was an interest there, which certainly developed as I got older- I had a lot of fascination for cars.

    MARK: How about your Father? What did he do?

    BELL: He had a branch office at a loan company that he worked 37 years for and he passed away from a heart attack about a year after his retirement. My mother was a homemaker, she made it to about the age of 77 and she also heart problems. It seems to be another part of our family history. If you go to a Bell family reunion there's alot of Aunts and no Uncles.

    MARK: What were you like as teen?

    BELL: Well I cruised with my buddies, as a teenager and ummm... skipped lunch sometimes to buy car magazines - ya gotta have priorities.

    MARK: Were there any cruising sites or drag strips nearby?

    BELL: Yep, up in Minneapolis there was a drag strip and then in my home town there was a black county topped road out by the TV towers. This would be in the middle 50's. There were a lot of power packed Chevys and Fords, a few Hotrods and a couple of engine conversions in town. I used to do a lot of drag racing at night (Laughing). We were influenced by all of those great movies like "Rebel without a Cause", some of the B Flicks like "Running Wild" and "Hot Rod Girl" (more Laughing).

    MARK: Did you have troubles with the law on these outings?

    BELL: Not.. a... whole... lot ...until I got into motorcycles, in about the early 60's. There was a police officer in town that didn't like the megaphone, upswepted pipes on our bikes. Our bikes were all custom painted, everything was chromed, pearl painted stuff, tuck and roll seats. He didn't like the "megatones" on our motorcycles, as he called them. I had to go to court, one time, and I beat the muffler charges, cause the custom exhaust muffler was longer than the stock one from the factory. I just had to make some new baffles. Yeah, that cop was always after us... My buddy came back from the marine corp., in Vietnam, and during his first week back, he was out driving his Corvette and the same cop gave him a ticket- kind of like welcome home (chuckle)..

    MARK: What was your first car?

    BELL: It was a '29 Ford Coupe. It had white walls, fiesta hub caps and great primer (chuckle).

    MARK: Did you do any customizing ?

    BELL: As much as kid could afford back then- with no money, you know. It was crude, pretty much a stock drive train. Then I moved up to a '57 Chevy, that my Dad helped me buy. Everything was chrome plated under the hood. It was a black two-ten hardtop lowered in the front, bigger tires in the back, button hubcaps, positraction. The previous owner had held g gas with it. I always kept it very clean- hand rubbed it. I put carpets in it, there again- I was going to school and I didn't have a lot of money. There were chrome plated things, like the glove compartment lid, the ashtray and the dash. I was getting into painting, a little bit, with the spray gun and so I painted the dash all black around the instruments and everything.Then I fogged them in a silvery green, I was getting into custom painting at that point.

    MARK: You were working on in the garage? In the yard?

    BELL: There was a bodyshop that use to let me pull my car in to work on it. Then after that, I got a '53 Olds from California that was a real clean stock coupe with a stick in it and I'm not a big mechanic, I have limited mechanical abilities and if it wasn't for friends over the years- I probably never would have survived.

    MARK: As far as the body work, you have such an attention for detail...

    BELL: You do what you can and then at a local shop, "LeBaron's Autobody" we painted the Olds- "Freuhauf trailer" yellow. That was the big thing in California, at that time, yellow & orange, with black interiors. After art school, I went into the Army and they gave us $130.00 to get home on, our separation pay, and I rode a bus for 3 days and nights to get home so I could save $100 dollars to get my bucket seats tuck and rolled in the Oldsmobile (Chuckle). Well you gotta have priorities. I think my parents in the 50's were kind of lucky because if your summer job paid about 50 bucks a week - $49.95 went into the car- on pay day. They couldn't understand why I would just sit around the house, watching TV all the time or I was out in the garage.(laughing)

    MARK: Can you tell me a bit more about your art career? You have been drawing cars since you were 5. Did you draw other things?

    BELL: Oh sure, you draw all sorts of things in art school, things for friends or to pick up money -you draw a lot of things.

    MARK: Was it traditional art background like art history and figure drawing?

    BELL: I took industrial design with a minor in sculpture. .The teachers and most of the students there weren't too crazy about modified cars. In fact, most of them drove Volkswagens and VW buses. Back to your question - I had life drawing and still life drawing and that kind of stuff, too.

    MARK: Did you throw yourself into any of course projects or were you the guy on the side drawing the cars?

    BELL: Well ...I'd always draw cars on my own time or pin stripe, a little bit. In 1956, I came home from a toboggan party and I went to my bedroom and I had picked up the new "Carcraft", that day. It was Friday night, I was about 16 years old, and while changing my wet clothes I started looking at this car book. I sat on the bed and started looking at this great custom shoebox Ford on the cover, with the candy apple paint, the Olds motor in it, all tuck and rolled and everything. I started flipping through the book and there was this article on Von Dutch, the pinstriper. That was a very big night in my life, looking at Von Dutch's work. There was a guy who had all that abstract , Salvador Dali type art and he would paint it on these killer cars.

    MARK: He started out in motorcycles, too, didn't he?

    BELL: Yeah, he was a motorcycle mechanic, an engraver, pinstriper and did other things. He was a very unusual guy, a little troubled maybe- but a genius. We heard a lot of Von Dutch stories and I don't think he realized how many young people he encouraged. I think if he knew that, today, he would feel very good about it. Von Dutch passed away in 1992.

    MARK: Were you influenced by other Artists, like that?

    BELL: You know... You're exposed to it, going to an art school. Some unusual movies, films, artists and things from other countries. Yeah, there's a lot of influences- you go to a lot of museums and art galleries.

    MARK: To me, your art shows influences from comic books and things happening in California ?

    BELL: Well that's where this all started. That's the basis for most of the rodding, although there was rodding all over the country, California had the magazines and I think that's where we had our focus. I think Minnesota is a lot like Michigan. There has always been a strong connection to the West coast. You can see it in the Cobo Hall Show with AutoRama. There's so many traditional cars as well as the new direction folks have taken with high tech and specialty items on their vehicles - it's a happy mix with alot of nice work and craftsmanship going on here.

    I think too with magazines- Street Rodder, Hot Rod, Rod & Custom, Rodder's Digest all these great books that are being written now , for instance, Motor Book International and other specialty books- I don't think there are any lags anymore. I think that in every area of the country there are progressive people. Like Posie, out in Pennsylvania, he's always up to date with everything. Just like the great builders, here in Michigan, that build great rods and customs with the latest technology.

    MARK: I've seen you reference BOYD on page 273 of Street Rodder.

    BELL: Yeah, Boyd has been on a steady course for a number of years in rodding and customizing. Boyd has taken the automotive high performance custom culture into Wall Street. He's even been on covers of magazines like the Smithsonian. He has done for the rodders what Tom McMullen did back in the 70's with custom motorcycles.Suddenly, you would see a Joe Nammath riding a Chopped Harley , on the cover of Esquire magazine. A guy like Tom McMullen would find himself being written up in magazines like Newsweek. All these influences, they are so big and so dynamic like the movie "Easy Rider". All of a sudden every kid in America wanted a bike with a long front end and a crazy paint job.

    MARK: An American flag on the gas tank? Peter Fonda a crossing a bridge?

    BELL: Steppenwolf playing in the background. Yep, that's as good as life gets (laughing).

    Yeah, we're all influenced by all these things from books, from cars we've seen, from going to the drag races in the 50's & 60's, and we live in a time now -like with cable TV where you can enjoy all these things right in your own living room.

    MARK: Yeah, I think there's channel out there dedicated to it.

    BELL: It's definitely a great time to be a gear head (chuckle)
     
  4. jakesbackyard
    Joined: Feb 13, 2007
    Posts: 884

    jakesbackyard
    Member
    from ND
    1. Upholstery

    Sad news indeed. I'll miss his MSRA BTT50s t-shirt art.
     
  5. Sad news hope it is quick.
     
  6. Royalshifter
    Joined: May 29, 2005
    Posts: 15,583

    Royalshifter
    Moderator
    from California

    Very sad to hear. Hope for the best for Mr. Bell.
     
  7. Very sad news. Always loved his work. Thoughts and prayers go out to Dave and his family............p.s. Thanks for including that interview, Jeff. Hopefully it lends some insight into a great artist for those you've never seen his work.........Don.
     
    Last edited: May 2, 2012
  8. nukeman
    Joined: Mar 17, 2007
    Posts: 133

    nukeman
    Member
    from Michigan

    When I was 10 years old I started mowing lawns so I could buy "Hot Wheels" and Street Rodder magazine. I always read it from back to front.
    Whenever I see some of Dave's artwork, it brings back those memories of my youth. Carefree days, fresh mowed lawns, and cool cars.

    Thank you Dave.
     
  9. Always loved Mr. Bell's work. He is definitely one of the true automotive art icons.

    Thanks Dave, for your contribution to the hobby. Your art has always been fun. Hope you are comfortable and get plenty of rest. E
     
  10. jammersspeed
    Joined: Sep 28, 2010
    Posts: 346

    jammersspeed
    Member
    from herman mn.

    sad sad news....
     
  11. Terrible Tom
    Joined: Feb 15, 2010
    Posts: 582

    Terrible Tom
    Member

    Sad to hear. Prayers have been sent. RIP Dave.
    Tom
     
  12. jcapps
    Joined: Dec 30, 2008
    Posts: 473

    jcapps
    Member
    from SoCal

    Prayers to Dave and the family. Its tough enough to get the news about having cancer, I know personally, but to find out too late for survival must be devastating.
     
  13. 40StudeDude
    Joined: Sep 19, 2002
    Posts: 9,540

    40StudeDude
    Member

    Sad to hear about Dave...a fellow artist and a staple of the roddingn communnity for many, many years...

    Wish him a speedy recovery...

    R-
     
    Last edited: May 2, 2012
  14. Mr48chev
    Joined: Dec 28, 2007
    Posts: 33,993

    Mr48chev
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    That is sad news to hear about someone who's art has been a part of our lives for so long.

    Like so many others I have always watched for and enjoyed his drawings.

    Years ago I made a trip to the Easyrider Store in Bellevue Wa to buy a special Dave Bell shirt that was out that month and had to explain to my dad why only that specific shirt would do. I was about 40 at the time.
     
  15. Hotrodbuilderny
    Joined: Mar 20, 2009
    Posts: 1,646

    Hotrodbuilderny
    Member

    I always enjoyed seeing his art ,he will be missed R.I.P. Dave Bell
     
  16. jimdillon
    Joined: Dec 6, 2005
    Posts: 3,291

    jimdillon
    Member

    It is sad in a number of ways. Too bad he is not given the chance to fight it. I always was somewhat mesmerized by his art. Prayers for him and his loved ones-Jim
     
  17. So sorry to hear this.
    How about we try to put a celebratory/positive spin on this and post up some of his work? I'll start with one of my favs....
     

    Attached Files:

  18. williebill
    Joined: Mar 1, 2004
    Posts: 3,285

    williebill
    Member

    This is really sad. I've saved a lot of t-shirts with his art over the years. Some I stopped wearing because i wanted to preserve Mr. Bell's artwork.Thought many times about framing them,and hanging them on the wall.
    Think now I'll do just that.
    Godspeed,Mr. Bell.
     
  19. SUNROOFCORD
    Joined: Oct 22, 2005
    Posts: 2,144

    SUNROOFCORD
    Member

  20. oldandkrusty
    Joined: Oct 8, 2002
    Posts: 2,141

    oldandkrusty
    Member

    This is really the worst news! CRAP! That all I can say...
     
  21. jjrodder
    Joined: Dec 16, 2006
    Posts: 75

    jjrodder
    Member

    Indeed, this is sad news. I have known Dave for almost 50 years. I have many pieces of his artwork in my collections. He is a great hot rod artist as well as a great friend.
    My thoughts and prayers are with Dave and his family at this time.

    Also, thanks to Jeff for including that very interesting interview with Dave.
     
  22. Weasel
    Joined: Dec 30, 2007
    Posts: 6,698

    Weasel
    Member

    I am proud to have a car I helped build featured in one of Dave's cartoons in SRM. I met him in St. Ignace and had the chance to have a long chat about 'stuff' a few years back. I still have the T shirt he signed unworn and treasure it. This is such terrible news for Dave and his family. His many fans will be praying for him.
     
  23. Sad to here, Dave did quite a few paintings for me over the years. including a Henry Hirise. Get well Dave.
     
  24. Damn!!! Prayers out to you Dave!!
     
  25. The "Toon" I have hangin in my office that Dave gave me years ago as
    a B day present means a
    whole bunch more 2 me now.
    Prayin 4 ya Dave.
     
  26. Patrick46
    Joined: Nov 26, 2008
    Posts: 565

    Patrick46
    Member

    Is Dave a member here on the HAMB???
     
  27. Redz Rodz
    Joined: Oct 4, 2002
    Posts: 490

    Redz Rodz
    Member

    just read the interview norwell posted ,very cool guy! henry hirise will live forever!, godspeed dave bell my thoughs & prayers are with ya.
     
  28. mikeallcars
    Joined: Feb 16, 2012
    Posts: 1,316

    mikeallcars
    Member

    RIP Dave . My thoughts and prayers are with your family and loved ones .
     
  29. olcurmdgeon
    Joined: Dec 15, 2007
    Posts: 2,289

    olcurmdgeon
    Member

    Terrible news! I met Dave when we lived in Red Wing, MN in the 70s. And later he was kind enough to do some art work for our little club when I moved back to NH. A great guy, totally down to earth and friendly. Prayers for Dave and his family from all of us in NH. God Bless him.
     
  30. Oh man, this news makes me really sad for him and his family...and for us. I grew up on his drawings. We'll be losing a piece of ourselves and our culture.

    Good thoughts and prayers for Dave and his family.
     

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