Cars + Women + Paris = Auto-Erotica 1920s
Car culture as defined today owes everything to what was originally created at the turn of the century and then after WWII with the birth of the American hot rodding spirit. However when it came to straight out seductive poses of women and cars, the Parisian photographers of the 1920s created the genre.
Here from the archives are a selection of what has been referred to by one publisher as "Wheels & Curves" (horrible title). It is no less than "beauty & the machine" and most certainly "auto-erotica" in the finest sense of the double-entendre!
All the photographs in this post are standard size (3.5" x 5.5") real photo post cards (rppc). The sepia toned photographs are unattributed and may possibly be the work of the Albert Wyndham Studio or one of the larger Paris studios: PC Paris or A.Noyer. All the black & white toned photographs are either marked with the mysterious "question mark in a triangle logo" (established as another mark used by the Ostra/Biederer Studio) or unmarked. Either way they are all the work of the two brothers operating the Ostra/Biederer Studios.
The requirements needed to qualify for the genre: a lovely lady posed on, near or under an automobile with her skirt raised, giving the viewer a glimpse of her lingerie: panties, garter belt, stockings and high heels required! The "automobile breakdown" gambit is a natural as we get a variety of views of the roadside mechanic at work, skirts conveniently raised.
I have been a car crazy, hot rod enthusiast since I was a kid and I have owned thousands of car culture magazines over the years, actually one of my first collections. In all the years of viewing models posed with hot rods and automobiles, nothing has came close to the marvelous, subtle eroticism presented in these 100 year old photographs.
There were also posers with no need to to get there hands dirty who nonetheless found the hoods and bumpers of their Citroens and Vivastellas irresistible...
...reading on the running board and relaxing behind the wheel and in the back seat...
Lunch time, coffee, tea? ...and dressing or undressing?
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