Art Bites: Just What Is the U.K. Speed Camera Illustration Supposed to Be?

Last April, Twitter erupted into a heated debate: what is the U.K.’s ‘Speed Camera’ sign, meant to be?

Like the Rorschach test[1], where one person might see a jumping bunny and another might see a pair of bloody knives (and might need to look into some therapy), or 2015’s internet-breaking blue or gold dress[2] (it’s blue, by the way), people were split into two camps when it came to the Speed Camera design: those who thought it showed a Victorian bellows camera in profile, and those who thought it was a modern CCTV system facing forwards. Despite the online debate, the speed sign first produced in 1990s does actually show a Victorian bellows camera.

for years i thought the UK speed camera sign depicted a Victorian bellows camera pointing to the right, but it’s just a boring CCTV camera pointing towards the viewer :/ pic.twitter.com/sCOVzyRPhW[3]

— Hands off Rafah 🇵🇸 (@FeyeraBender) April 4, 2023[4]

The online debate was sparked by a tweet on April 4 2023 by user @FeyeraBender[5] who wrote “for years i thought the UK speed camera sign depicted a Victorian bellows camera pointing to the right, but it’s just a boring CCTV camera pointing towards the viewer :/”. The next day—after replies flooded in that the user had “ruined” the sign for people, with one user calling it “one of the most shocking things I’ve ever heard”[6]—@FeyeraBender tweeted “wow i’m so sorry to have caused so much distress and discomfort”[7] followed by fingers in a peace symbol and a sad face emoji.

But the user was mistaken. In fact, in 2008 the BBC posted an article ‘What makes a good road sign?’[8] and used the speed camera icon as a key example. They wrote: “A 19th Century-style bellows camera is used, with great success, to warn of the imminent danger of racking up a speeding fine.” The speed camera sign isn’t the only symbol throwing back to the Victorian times, either, with the BBC adding that “rail enthusiasts’ hearts must race at the symbol of a steam train before level crossings”, still used today despite the fact that the last steam locomotive used for British Railways was created in 1960.

a vintage early 20th-century advertisement shows the Goers Pocket bellows camera

Advert for the Goerz Pocket Tenax camera, 1909. Photo: The Print Collector/Print Collector/Getty Images.

Despite the false missive, multiple press outlets believed the user’s claim, including DerbyshireLive and CornwallLive who both ran coverage on the this new revelation. CornwallLive[9] wrote just days after the original tweet: “Have you ever assumed the picture is that of a side-profile camera? Well, it turns out it shows something completely different.” Always do your research, kids. And no, reading a tweet doesn’t count as research.

The U.K. is home to more than 7,000 speed cameras, and the bellows symbol was created by the Department for Transport sometime in the 1990s, after the first speed camera was installed in the UK on the M40 motorway in 1991. The first British bellows camera was invented some 130 years earlier, in May 1856. Bellows allowed photographers to move their lenses, altering the focus of their shot.

Follow Artnet News[10] on Facebook:Want to stay ahead of the art world? Subscribe to our newsletter to get the breaking news, eye-opening interviews, and incisive critical takes that drive the conversation forward.[11]

References

  1. ^ Rorschach test (news.artnet.com)
  2. ^ blue or gold dress (en.wikipedia.org)
  3. ^ pic.twitter.com/sCOVzyRPhW (t.co)
  4. ^ April 4, 2023 (twitter.com)
  5. ^ @FeyeraBender (twitter.com)
  6. ^ “one of the most shocking things I’ve ever heard” (twitter.com)
  7. ^ “wow i’m so sorry to have caused so much distress and discomfort” (twitter.com)
  8. ^ ‘What makes a good road sign?’ (news.bbc.co.uk)
  9. ^ CornwallLive (www.cornwalllive.com)
  10. ^ Artnet News (www.facebook.com)
  11. ^ Want to stay ahead of the art world? Subscribe to our newsletter to get the breaking news, eye-opening interviews, and incisive critical takes that drive the conversation forward. (link.artnet.com)