1932 French National Track Championships an Art Deco Beauty!

$610.00

Beautiful Art Deco poster for the French National Track Championships at the Parc des Princes velodrome in Paris, held on Sunday 17 July 1932. A powerful track cyclist, seen from below, as he carves up the steep banking, wearing a vivid red jersey and black shorts, with muscular bare legs and shoes clipped into the pedals. The rider is framed by a blue summer sky and, in the infield below, a green football pitch, reminding us that the Parc des Princes served both football and cycling. The artwork is signed in the upper left corner.

Large black Art Deco-style lettering spells out “Parc des Princes” beneath the artwork, with the full program printed in French below. The meeting features “La grande finale du Championnat de France de Vitesse entre Michard, Faucheux et Gérardin,” the grand final of the French sprint championship between Lucien Michard, Lucien Faucheux, and Louis Gérardin. The race results show that Louis Gérardin won the 1932 professional title ahead of Michard and Faucheux, the exact trio billed on this poster.

A second headline announces “La grande revanche du Championnat de France de Demi fond sur 100 kil. derrière grosses motos,” the big rematch of the French motor paced championship over 100 kilometers behind the big motorcycles. The riders listed include Georges Paillard, Robert Grassin, Charles Lacquehay, Raynaud, Maréchal, and Auguste Wambst, all leading French stayers of the interwar period. Georges Paillard, in particular, was already a star, having won the professional UCI motor-paced world championship in 1929 and again in 1932, and holding multiple French demi-fond titles during this period.

The venue itself was newly modernised when this poster was issued. The Parc des Princes had just undergone a major rebuild in 1931 and 1932, completed in April 1932 with a capacity of about 40,000 spectators and a shortened velodrome track of approximately 454 meters, down from the original 666-meter circuit. Throughout the first half of the twentieth century, the Parc des Princes was one of the central arenas of French cycle sport, and it regularly hosted the Tour de France finish, which underscores the prestige of the national championship meeting held there.

Combining dynamic Art Deco design, the names of the top French sprinters of the 1930s, and the historic setting of the Parc des Princes velodrome, this poster is a superb visual piece of cycling history.

This poster has been archivally and professionally linen-backed.

Virtually all original vintage posters of this era were viewed as temporary advertising and were printed on very thin paper. While expensive, linen backing is a conservation method used to mount, stabilize, preserve, and protect vintage posters so they can be displayed or framed without compromising value.

This poster is an original first printing, not a reproduction.

Year: 1932
Artist: N/A
Imp: N/A

Size: 39.5 x 65.5 cm (15 ½  x 25 ¾  inches) – Linen Backed Archival Mounting

Posters are sold unframed. Framed images are display ideas only.

This is a one-of-a-kind item; please review the photos carefully to determine the condition.

This item is listed on multiple platforms, and availability is subject to prior sale elsewhere.

Out of stock

Description

Demi-Fond Champion – Stayer Racing

So what is the Demi-Fond anyway? Today, it is commonly known as Stayer Racing.

The discipline of motorpacing is over a century old. It has been a part of cycling since the late 1800s, when motorcycle paced races were popular on both the velodrome and the road. Before motorcycles were used, tandems of up to five riders paced cyclists to go farther and faster than the individual could alone.

Each rider teamed up with a pacer who could push up his speed. The motos roared around the track, often without mufflers and with flames flaring from the exhaust. The races, called Demi-fond, covered 100-kilometer races, and the riders completed in just over an hour. The cyclists, who are known as stayers, tucked themselves tightly behind the pacers on specially designed bikes made to handle the g-forces of the track bankings and to get them as close as possible to the rear of the motorcycle. Motorcycles were designed to push the limits of speed on the steeply banked tracks, and to keep the rider sheltered and tucked in close behind.

It was a dangerous discipline. At high speed, a blown tire or broken bike often proved fatal. In the early 1900s, racers reached speeds of 90 km/h, and by the 1920s, they were doing over 120 km/h. In their incessant pursuit of speed, records, money and fame, many died when they came crashing down on the track, or went flying up and over the banking into the grandstand of spectators. At the turn of the century, stayers were some of the highest paid athletes in North America and Europe. Track grandstands were filled with tens of thousands of people and the riders were household names. Even though it isn’t as popular as it once was, motorpaced racing still exists and motorbikes are used to train and fine-tune cyclists’ fitness for the regular road, cyclocross, and track season. To this day, lower-powered derny machines, 90cc motorcycles that are specially designed to pace riders, are used on the steeply banked tracks during the European six-day races.

An experienced pacer will know for how long to hold it and when to back off. He is often a cyclist himself, who knows how to gauge the roads, the corners, the speed, and the rhythm of the ride. He drives the motorbike as if he is pedaling in a racing peloton. In a fight to stay as close as possible to the motorbike, the cyclist will occasionally touch the rear fender in a moment of inattention, striping it with black tire marks. The slipstream, at times, feels like a lifeline: In it, we fly, but the minute we are out in the wind, we flounder.

Read the full article by Michael Barry here – CompetitiveCyclist.com

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Want to Know Even More About the Demi-Fond?  Keep Reading this fantastic piece from PEZ Cycling

The French used to call it, ‘le demi-fond,’ in English we called it, ‘the big motors’ or ‘pace following’ or ‘stayers.’ Intrepid riders on specially built machines with a small front wheel and reversed front forks so they could tuck in tight behind their leather-clad pacer whilst turning monster gear ratios. At it’s best it’s a wonderful, if ecologically unsound spectacle, especially on a big old concrete bowl with the motors roaring and the big machines running at autobahn speed with crazy guys in silk fronted and wool backed jerseys tucked in behind them.

For a long time it was hugely popular across Europe and it still survives in Germany and to a lesser extent, in Switzerland but in its own popularity and big money lay the roots of its demise as a World championship discipline. ‘Bungs’ some call them, others ‘pay offs’ or simply ‘bribes,’ there was no way you could win without your pacer being well enough remunerated to ride FOR you. But you never knew if he was going to until the Worlds final when for some reason – a big bung from another rider – you kept hitting the roller because he was backing off when he should have been accelerating.

The UCI – and everyone else in track cycling knew it was getting out of hand and so closed the book on the event as a Worlds discipline. The last amateur Worlds for the event was held in 1992 and the last professional Worlds in 1994 with Germany’s Carsten Podlesch winning both races; he once explained a few years back to me that he was therefore World champion FOREVER.

This is just a tiny excerpt, read the full article by Edmond Hood and see some amazing photos here – PezCyclingNews.com

Additional information

Weight 3 lbs

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