Boss Building by Michael Irvine
Following the highly acclaimed, Any Color So Long As It's Black, the second painting in Michael's 'Building Horsepower Series',
Boss Building lets us take a peek into the past — to catch a glimpse of where one of the world's most famous big blocks got it's start.
To compete in Nascar with the new Boss 429 engine, Ford had to make this monster motor available to the general public. So, in 1969, FoMoCo
unleashed this bad boy, the Boss 429!
Built at the Kar Kraft Brighton Michigan Plant, these new Boss Mustangs received numerous performance upgrades, including, but not limited to, a beefed up suspension and moving the battery to the trunk. The only visual clues to the car's transformation, were a small decal on the front fender and a not-so-subtle hood scoop — body color in 1969 and black in 1970. Michael takes us back in time to a summer day in 1969 as a Grabber Green Boss rolls off the line. Inside the building, an engine is being lowered into the next street racer. 'Joe' in quality control checks under the hood of a Grabber Blue '70, while the train loaded with Bosses and Shelbys leaves the plant. "As an artist, you don't know what will inspire you or when. I'd been thinking about a Boss painting for a while. Then one day I'm flipping through a copy of "Mustang Magazine" and there's a double page spread aerial photo of Kar Kraft's Brighton Michigan Plant in 1969. That did it! The article compelled me to contact the owner of the photo, Randy Hernandez, who's dad worked at the plant back in the day. He was the Manufacturing Liaison Manager (the most senior Ford Motor Company employee on-site). Turns out, Randy has a bunch of photos of Boss 429s rolling down the assembly line on cd and offers them for sale. How could I resist buying the cd and creating the painting!"- MICHAEL IRVINE Print Size: 18" x 24" image on 22" x 28", Edition Size: 800, S/N Price: $160 See also Ford Muscle |