Volvo’s new XC60 becomes a camera in the hands of Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer

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Volvo's new XC60 becomes a camera in the hands of Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer

Volvo Cars, the premium car maker best known for its leadership in safety, has teamed up with three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer and artist Barbara Davidson for a world-first – using the on-board safety cameras of the new Volvo XC60 to create a special collection of photographs.

This is the first time ever that a car has been used as a camera by a photographer. Davidson’s collection of around 30 photographs, taken through the lenses of the XC60’s on-board safety cameras, captures life on the streets of the Danish capital Copenhagen from a completely fresh perspective.

Davidson’s photographs were first exhibited at the Canvas Studios gallery in Shoreditch, London, and the exhibition will travel to other countries during 2017.

“The collection does two things. Firstly it is a snapshot of European city life in all its glory; secondly it also highlights the complex environments that we live in. It is thanks to these cameras and other on-board sensors that make modern city life safer for pedestrians and other road users,” says Davidson. “With this project we connect art and safety for people to see the benefits of this technology.”

Davidson, a multiple Pulitzer Prize-winner, holder of an Emmy Award and a former staff photographer for the Los Angeles Times newspaper, chose to work with Volvo Cars based on her own history with the brand.

“I have a very personal connection with Volvo Cars. When I was a teenager I was involved in a serious road accident where the car flipped over, which, in normal circumstances, would probably have proven fatal. I was told later that I had survived because of the car I had been travelling in – a Volvo,” says Davidson.

Over 1.2 million people die each year in road accidents around the globe. Volvo’s approach to road safety is focused on real-life traffic situations which the company has studied in detail since 1970 through its Traffic Accident Research Team. With this matchless set of real-world data, Volvo’s safety engineers have set about systematically working to mitigate or eliminate potential life-threatening accidents.

In 2008 the Swedish brand launched the world’s first standard autonomous emergency braking system, City Safety, in the first Volvo XC60. City Safety has shown to have reduced collisions by up to 45% in Sweden alone.

“We take a realistic and practical approach to safety at Volvo Cars. Our vision is to reach a point in time where no one should be killed or seriously injured in a new Volvo car. We call it Vision 2020,” says Malin Ekholm, Vice President of Volvo Cars Safety Centre.

Volvo Cars’ all-new XC60 was launched with three new safety features that work to assist the driver by delivering steering support when required. Steer Assist has been added to the ground-breaking City Safety system. A new safety system called Oncoming Lane Mitigation also uses Steer Assist to help mitigate head-on collisions, while Volvo’s Blind Spot Information System (BLIS) now uses Steer Assist functionality to reduce the risk of lane-changing collisions, making the new XC60 one of the safest SUVs available today.

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