Advertisement
BBC TopGear
BBC TopGear
Subscribe to Top Gear newsletter
Sign up now for more news, reviews and exclusives from Top Gear.
Subscribe
Motorsport

Stop what you're doing and look at these exploded racecars

'Disintegrated II' gallery launches in Dubai, and it's amazing

  • 1982 Porsche 956

    Three years ago, Swiss artist Fabian Oefner premiered his 'Disintegrating' series: a stunning Ferrari 330 P4 photographed to recreate the impression it had actually exploded.

    It hadn't, of course, because Fabian actually likes cars. What he did was photograph - in exquisite detail - a scale-model of a 330 P4 and mesh the images together. Now he's back with his 'Disintegrating II' set of images.

    They're all in this gallery, and they are amazing. The detail behind them is equally mind-boggling. Click on for the full story...

    Advertisement - Page continues below
  • 1934-1940 Bugatti 57 SC

    It all began with a single sketch on a piece of paper. He conjured up where the individual pieces would sit, and then went about the business of unscrewing the scale models piece by piece, right down to the individual, tiny screws. Each car is said to contain more than 1,000 components.

    "The whole disassembly in itself took more than a day for each car due to the complexity of the models. But that’s a bit of a boy thing," Fabian explains.

  • 1969 Ford GT40

    Once the car had been taken apart, Fabian then placed each individual piece according to his sketch, using fine needles and pieces of string to hang them in position. He then shot the piece - individually, of course - working out the right angle and lighting. We're told he took over 2,000 images to create just the single one you see above.

    Says Fabian: "“The hardest part was actually setting up the camera, lens and light, because the biggest frustration is when you can't get any beautiful images out of it!”

    Advertisement - Page continues below
  • 1957 Maserati 250 F

    These 2,000+ images where then blended together in post-production to get that single image, using the wheels as a reference point. Each part was masked in Photoshop, then cut and pasted into the final picture.

    "These are possibly the ‘slowest high-speed’ images ever captured,” says Fabian. “It took almost two months to create an image that looks as if it was captured in a fraction of a second. There’s an enjoyment in the analysis, discovering something by taking it apart, like peeling an onion.”

  • 1936-1937 Auto Union Type C

    The finished artworks are currently on display at the the MB&F M.A.D.Gallery Dubai (it's a mechanical art gallery), and each image is available in two sizes: 140x70cm (limited to 8 prints) and 230x115cm (limited to 3 prints).

    "What you see in these images is a moment that never existed in real life,” says Fabian. "What looks like a car falling apart is in fact a moment in time that has been created artificially by blending over 2000 individual images together. There is a unique pleasure about artificially building a moment. Freezing a moment in time is stupefying.”

    What would you like to see Fabian 'explode' for his next series? Answers in the box below, please...

More from Top Gear

Loading
See more on Maserati

Subscribe to the Top Gear Newsletter

Get all the latest news, reviews and exclusives, direct to your inbox.

By clicking subscribe, you agree to receive news, promotions and offers by email from Top Gear and BBC Studios. Your information will be used in accordance with our privacy policy.

BBC TopGear

Try BBC Top Gear Magazine

subscribe