Harley Earl

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Harley Earl bigraphy, stories - Generals

Harley Earl : biography

November 22, 1893 – April 10, 1969

[[Buick Y-Job, the first concept car]]Harley J. Earl (November 22, 1893 – April 10, 1969) was the initial designated head of Design at General Motors, later becoming Vice President, the first top executive ever appointed in Design of a major corporation in American history. He was an industrial designer and a pioneer of modern transportation design. A coachbuilder by trade, Earl pioneered the use of freeform sketching and hand sculpted clay models as automotive design techniques. He subsequently introduced the "concept car" as both a tool for the design process and a clever marketing device.

Earl’s Buick Y-Job was the first concept car. He started "Project Opel", which eventually became the Chevrolet Corvette, and he authorized the introduction of the tailfin to automotive styling. During World War II, he was an active contributor to the Allies’ research and development program in advancing the effectiveness of camouflage.

General Motors

1928 LaSalle phaeton Earl Automotive Works was bought by Cadillac dealer Don Lee, who kept Harley Earl as director of its custom body shop.

Lawrence P. Fisher, general manager of the Cadillac division, was visiting Cadillac dealers and distributors around the country, including Lee. Fisher met Earl at Lee’s dealership and observed him at work. Fisher, whose automotive career began with coachbuilder Fisher Body, was impressed with Earl’s designs and methods, including the use of modeling clay to develop the forms of his designs..

Fisher commissioned Earl to design the 1927 LaSalle for Cadillac’s companion marque. The success of the LaSalle convinced General Motors president Alfred P. Sloan to create the Art and Color Section of General Motors, and to name Earl as its first director.

Prior to the establishment of the Art and Color Section, American automobile manufacturers did not assign any great importance to the appearance of automobile bodies. Volume manufacturers built bodies designed by engineers guided only by functionality and cost. Many luxury-car manufacturers, including GM, did not make bodies at all, opting instead to ship chassis assemblies to a coachbuilder of the buyer’s choice.

The executives at General Motors at the time, including engineers, division heads, and sales executives, viewed Earl’s conceptual ideas as flamboyant and unfounded. Earl struggled to legitimize his design approach against the tradition- and production-oriented executives. As head of the newly formed Art and Color Section in 1927, he was initially referred to as one of the "pretty picture boys", and his Design Studio as being the "Beauty Parlor".Cambridge, MIT Press (1995), 200-212 Design History: An Anthology".

In 1937, the Art and Color Section was renamed the Styling Section. Sloan eventually promoted Earl all the way to the vice president level, making him (to Sloan’s knowledge) the first styling person to be a VP at a large corporation.

Harley Earl and Alfred P. Sloan implemented "Dynamic Obsolescence" (essentially synonymous with planned obsolescence) and the "Annual Model Change" (tying model identity to a specific year) to further position design as an engine for the company’s product success.Richard A. Wright, 1996.First 100 Years of the Auto Industry in the U.S.". These ideas are largely taken for granted today but were unusual at the time.

Buick Y-Job

Rear view of [[Buick Y-Job]] In 1939, the Styling Division, under Earl’s instruction, styled and built the Buick Y-Job, the motor industry’s first concept car. While many one-off custom automobiles had been made before, the Y-job was the first car built by a mass manufacturer for the sole purpose of determining the public’s reaction to new design ideas. After being shown to the public, the Y-job became Earl’s daily driver.

Camouflage research

In 1942, during WWII, Earl established a camouflage research and training division at General Motors, one consequence of which was a 22-page document called Camouflage Manual for General Motors Camouflage.Lauve, Henry de S. (1942), Camouflage Manual for General Motors Camouflage School. Detroit MI: General Motors. A decade before, two former WWI camouflage artists, Harold Ledyard Towle (a U.S. Army camoufleur) and McClelland Barclay (who created the Fisher Body ads, and contributed to U.S. Navy camouflage during both World Wars) had worked as designers at General Motors. Among Earl’s apprentices was English designer David Jones, who worked at its British division at Vauxhall Motors, who served in the camouflage section of the Royal Engineers during WWII.Entries on "McClelland Barclay," "Harley Earl," "David Jones" and "Ledyard Towle" in Roy R. Behrens (2009), Camoupedia: A Compendium of Research on Art, Architecture and Camouflage. Dysart IA: Bobolink Books. ISBN 0-9713244-6-8.