Faced with the surreal scale of the Duesenberg's chassis, some designers attempted to reduce the scale of the car. Not artist Rudolf Bauer. His intent was to create the longest, most distinctive Duesenberg ever built. And he did.
Bauer emphasized the dominant theme of the chassis--its sheer size--rather than hide it. Accordingly, his sketches depict a narrow, elongated hood extending well beyond the Model J radiator shell and reaching all the way back to the low vee windshield. A canted, streamlined grille conceals the standard grille, recessed behind, and reveals the influence of the Art Deco and Streamlining movements.
Bauer created a long, low, and provocative example of automotive art, more magnificent and decadent than any of his paintings--and significantly more valuable. Parallel rows of 27 hood louvers further accentuated the car's great length. Dual rear mounted spares bring the overall length to 20' 6"--the longest Duesenberg ever built.
Bauer took delivery from Rollson in April 1940. The original Rollson invoice accompanies the car. (The Smithsonian Archive of American Art has a file on Bauer's Duesenberg). Bauer recorded just 9,884 miles on his Duesenberg before parking it at his mansion in Deal, NJ. He died of lung cancer in November 1953 at 64, and his widow soon advertised the car. Bill Pettit purchased it and stored it at his Museum of Motoring Memories in Virginia for 45 years, preserving it in pristine, untouched condition. Pettit drove it 1,000 miles, and of his six Duesenbergs, he said this one drove like a new car. Its black lacquer is original, evidenced by the stone chips on the cycle fenders. The car also retains its original violet leather interior, deep purple carpets, silk top, and even its original six Vogue double-sided whitewalls.
The SCM Analysis
This car sold at RM's January 2007 auction in Phoenix for $2,805,000, the second highest price at auctions that week. Dave Kinney, Sports Car Market's man on the spot, reported: "Even though the body style and the unusual front end look better in person than in the catalog, this car is not the most elegant or graceful Model J ever seen. Condition: 2."
The car last sold in 1998 at Christie's Tarrytown, New York, auction for $1,267,500, and the SCM reporter described it as "all original, with a great story. Ignore the fact that from the rear, it looks like a Chevy Caprice-based Classic Tiffany. A sure show-stopper."
This price breaks the Duesenberg road car record of $2.64 million paid for Otis Chandler's one-off LeBaron phaeton at Gooding & Company's auction last October. The overall record is still $4.4 million for the Mormon Meteor, which was achieved at the 2004 Gooding auction in Pebble Beach.
How the "Last" Duesenberg happened
Since neither the engine, J397, nor the chassis, 2405, are the last actually made by Duesenberg, but the car was the last new Duesenberg delivered, there's a story to tell here. Josh Malks, current editor of the Classic Car Club of America (CCCA) Bulletin, detailed it in a letter in the August 1996 Bulletin, commenting on a May 1937 ad from a Chicago car dealer, Harry Felz, for "Duesenberg Bargains" and a new chassis. The new chassis Felz advertised was 2405/J397, that of our subject car. It had carried a body in 1931 and was a factory demonstrator. During that service a cylinder was scored, so the body was removed and the chassis leaned for years against the wall in Duesenberg's Indianapolis factory.
In January 1937, Bauer inquired about the purchase of a new chassis to create his car but Duesenberg was closing down. 2405/J397 was remembered and since no new Lycoming J engines were available, a local firm was engaged to re-sleeve the damaged cylinder. Soon afterward, Felz bought all 17 Duesenbergs remaining at the Duesenberg branches, along with the chassis for $18,000. Bauer finally made up his mind in August, and commissioned the principals at Duesenberg to build him a car. Augie Duesenberg bought back the chassis from Felz, and the process commenced.