The machine as seen at the end of the mechanical age

The machine as seen at the end of the mechanical age

By J. K. P. Hulten

Subjects: inventions, machines, art catalog, movement

Description: "The Machine" is a museum catalog created in 1968 for The Museum of Modern Art in New York City. It is bound by a metal cover riveted to the catalog (stamped illustration on the front cover, plain metal on the back). This illustrated book of images, descriptions and background is black and white, except for several pages at the back which are blue and white. The catalog starts with da Vinci's flying machine, includes Etienne-Jules Marey's bizarre 1882 camera gun, mobiles by Alexander Calder, optics by Marcel Duchamp and automatons by Jacques Vaucanson and Pierre Jocquet-Droz. There are perhaps a hundred or so other works – photos, drawings, sketches, cartoons - ranging from stills of Charlie Chaplin's "Modern Times" to Rub Goldberg's complicated solutions to simple situations. The book includes R. Buckminster Fuller's Dymaxion Car (a success that failed) and Anthony Granatelli's STP-Lotus Turbocar. There are also Raoul Hausmann's Dadaist images of men/machines that could have been a precursor of Star Trek's Borg. The photo's and descriptive text captured approximately 50 artists' perception of mechanical movement. This is a fascinating compilation of art and artifacts that must have been a wonderful exhibition of eye candy for the mind.

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