Motorcycle Artist Rocks Two-Axle World
The Soul of Motorcycling is Demonstrated Through Builders,
Painters and Fine Artists Such as Chris Kallas
By Bandit
Chris Kallas art available in the Black Market.
There are only a handful of scooter fanatics and artists who can capture
the spirit of motorcycling. They include Scott Jacobs, who recreated the
gracious lines of a Panhead, and David Uhl, who spent six months working
with oil and canvas to create a scene of a World War II sailor returning
home to greet a new Knucklehead and his woman. David Mann is another such
artist, who for 30 years has captured the latest styles of custom scooters
with acrylic paints. To that illustrious list we can now add Chris Kallas,
who also manages to apply his motorcycling heart to the canvas.
We stumbled onto Chris’ work at the recent Beach Ride in Ventura, Calif. He
began drawing at age 4 with child-like subjects of monsters, dinosaurs, spaceships,
Mercury capsules and WWI and WWII battle scenes with airplanes, ships and tanks.
Chris grew up in Southern California, where motorcycling
was prevalent. His first ride was at age 10, when his dad let him
ride his brother's mini-bike home. It was a bicycle-framed, lawnmower-powered,
clutch less, push start, direct belt drive, solid rubber wheeled, no-brake suicide
machine. His only other experience at the time was riding on the back of
his uncle's Suzuki 90. This uncle had a succession of bikes on which Chris
would receive rides. While they were fun to ride on, Chris thought, “When's
this guy going to get hip to a Harley?”
Chris Kallas art available in the Black Market.
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