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Artists Credited In Alt Text - Blog Posts

2 months ago
Klaus Bürgle artwork - a morass of elevated trains and highways with cars on them, with an industrialized city in the background. One of the trains has a cutaway section, revealing that it's a massive double-decker.
A yellow and blue double-decker train on an elevated track in a city. Artwork by Don Lawrence, commissioned in 1989 to celebrate 100 years of the Netherlands' Dutch Railways.
Shigeru Komatsuzaki, ‘Space train,’ 1981. A train labelled Moonline shoots through a tube connected to two giant cables, in a space elevator style structure, with Earth behind them.
An elevated future train by Gray Morrow for “The Transport Revolution,” a feature in Playboy, October 1970. People at a restaurant dine while watching the train go by.
David Schleinkofer. A roller coaster style future train zips by, with a future city in the background, complete with a domed building, weird glass sculptures, and a flying car.
Barclay Shaw, for "Trains of Tomorrow," in Future Life #18, May 1980. A flashy silver train rides rails with outer space in the background.
David Schleinkofer, for Science Digest magazine, May 1981. Passengers wait on the platform for a bullet train, while a cutaway shows seated passengers with giant purple seats and built-in seatback TVs.
"Supersonic Vacuum Train," by Peter Goodfellow. Bullet trains speed through bright pink tubes under the sea, surrounded by jellyfish and eels.
David Schleinkofer art for  Science Digest Magazine in the 80s, depicting a super train designed to go 600 mph through tunnels.
Two figures in jumpsuits grapple with each other on the top of a silver train speeding through the desert during a lightning storm. Peter Elson.

Trains of the future, from my latest art blog post.

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