David Mann (artist)

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David Mann
Dave Mann and Jacquie Mann.jpg
Born (1940-09-10)September 10, 1940[1]
Kansas City, MO[1]
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.[1]
Nationality USA
Education Kansas City Art Institute[2]
Known for painting, illustration
Movement biker art
Awards Kansas City Custom Car Show
1963 "Hollywood Run"[3]
AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame[4]
2004
National Motorcycle Museum (Anamosa, IA) Hall of Fame[2] – Promotion Category
2004
Patron(s) Ed "Big Daddy" Roth, Easyriders magazine[2]

David "Dave" Mann ((1940-09-10)September 10, 1940 – September 11, 2004(2004-09-11))[1] was a California graphic artist whose paintings celebrated biker culture, and choppers. Called "the biker world's artist-in-residence,"[5] his images are ubiquitous in biker clubhouses and garages, on motorcycle gas tanks, tattoos, and on T-shirts and other memorabilia associated with biker culture.[6][7][8][9] Choppers have been built based on the bikes first imagined in a David Mann painting.[2][10][11][12]

In the words of an anthropologist studying biker culture in New Zealand, "Mann’s paintings set ‘outlaw’ Harley chopper motorcycles against surreal backgrounds, and distorted skylines, colourful images that celebrated the chopper motorcycle and the freedom of the open road ... Many of his images captured the ‘Easyrider’ ethos – speed, the open road, long flowing hair – freedom."[13] Most of his works were for the motorcycle industry, especially for motorcycle magazines.

Biography

A native of Kansas City, Missouri, Mann began drawing and painting at an early age. His first passion was custom cars and his first job was as an automobile painter. After High School, he left Kansas City and settled in California where he became interested in motorcycles. He became immersed in biker culture and motorcycles supplanted cars and pin-up girls in his artwork.[14]

In 1963, Mann brought some of his artwork to the Kansas City Custom Car Show. There biker/artist Tom Fugle took an interest in his artwork, and with Mann's permission, showed a photo of the painting "Hollywood Run" to Ed "Big Daddy" Roth,[14] an artist and custom car painter, who was then the publisher of one of the first custom motorcycle magazines, Choppers. Roth loved the painting and commissioned 10 (or as many as 14 or 20, according to different sources)[15] original posters, which were made available in the back pages of Easyriders for many years. In 1965, Mann joined Fugle's El Forastero Motorcycle Club, becoming one of the founding members of the Kansas City Charter.[14][15] In 1971 he answered an advertisement for a "motorcycle artist" in the back of a new motorcycle magazine called Easyriders.[5]

After 1972 his artwork began appearing regularly in the magazine, and Mann's relationship with Easyriders would continue for the rest of his life. His art was reproduced as the magazine’s center spread beginning in 1973 and continued to be the publication's centerpiece until he was forced to retire in 2003 due to his failing health. A collection of Mann's work was published in 1993 and updated in 2004.[16][17]

In 2004 Mann was inducted into the motorcycle Hall of Fame by artist Billy Lane.[18]

Mann died a day after his 64th birthday. Just before his death a custom motorcycle was commissioned in his honor from Orange County Choppers, to be featured in an episode of the reality television series American Chopper. The "David Mann Bike" featured custom artwork in Mann's style, but Mann died before it was completed. The vehicle served as a posthumous tribute to the artist, and his work was featured on the show.[11][12] The episode was dedicated to Mann as well as Indian Larry, who had died a month earlier.

His ashes were to be interred in the gas tank of a Harley Sportster XLCH painted in his trademark "David Mann Red."[19] Mann is survived by his wife and three children.

Work

One of Mann's frequent motifs was a motorcycle and its rider paired with a complementary or contrasting figure. The simplest form is the iconic image of two bikes on the road side by side, and out of this grew different permutations that spanned 30 years.[20] There are three main variations.

The first is a biker alongside a kindred figure, such as a trucker or other archetypal, biker-sympathetic character,[8][21][22] or else a biker shadowed by a ghostly, mythic figure from the past, such as a medieval knight, Wild West gunfighter or trapper.[23][24][25][26] The two will have several matching clothing items, or have an identical facial appearance in order to ensure the viewer does not fail to appreciate that the biker is a modern incarnation of the mythic persona.[27][28][29][30][31]

Secondly, the biker would be seen alongside a social antagonist, such as hostile but foolish police officers,[32] square motorists,[33][34][35] or an upper-class caricature of The Man who is irritated by his wife's, daughter's or son's obvious admiration for and longing to ride away with the biker.[36][37][38][39]

The third variation has a female figure, sometimes supernatural and watching over the biker from the sky, perhaps looming in the rider's memories,[40][41][42][43][44] or else a real woman motorcycle passenger or woman in the background watching the biker ride away. Women are almost never depicted as riding their own bikes or taking part in the action; they are observers, sex objects or passengers.[45] Their facial expressions are either vacant or filled with lust and admiration directed at the biker and his bike.[46][47][48][49] Sometimes women are shown negatively as a sexual distraction which causes the biker to neglect his bike or his biker buddies.[50][51]

Mann painted three works where women are shown riding. One has a male and a female rider side by side on a road, and another has two women riding side by side on trikes at night, both with nothing remarkable happening.[52] In the other, a confused and frightened looking woman is shown attempting to ride a motorcycle, but she is out of control and being thrown off.[53] While most of Mann's depictions of women are more sexist than is usually the norm in mainstream society today,[54] some of his works are outright hostile to women, for example, a depiction of "Bike Heaven" shows bikers about to pass the pearly gates, but first stopping shop and barter at a sign saying "Chicks sale or trade make offer."[55]

A subset of Mann's work, apart from these variations, is more surrealist and often leaves out choppers and bikers entirely. Instead, the motifs are usually skulls, flames, nude women and tattoos, often playing with the figurative image which is tattooed on the skin coming to life.[56][57][58][59][60]

One of the messages contained in Mann's overall body of work is an unresolved tension between, on one side, the biker artist's (painter, chopper builder, performance artist) craving for attention and recognition for biker art and the biker lifestyle in the mainstream world of middle-class straights and squares; and, on the other side, a rejection of that very same world based on the biker preference for biker values over mainstream values, and the need to show the squares and their opinions have no power over the biker.[36] The biker/artist is aloof, yet bristles when ignored or disparaged and seeks ways of getting the right kind of attention.[61][62]

A further contrast is apparent in the repeated theme of the honor and nobility of the biker, depicting bikers as modern knights or similar mythic heroes, and the appearance of members of Mann's El Forastero Motorcycle Club in many of his paintings,[14][15] a club whose members have been found guilty for the crimes motorcycle theft[63] and for "transporting and distributing methamphetamine" after it was discovered the club members pooled money to buy narcotics at their organized events.[64][65][66]

See also

References

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  18. Lane. p 87. "David Mann was inducted into the motorcycle Hall of Fame in 2004, and he deserved it. That is a huge honor for him, and it is as much of an honor for me to have been asked to personally induct him. David told me that he is a fan of my work and that impressed me beyond words."
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External links