{"id":3174,"date":"2016-11-08T09:00:34","date_gmt":"2016-11-08T08:00:34","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/sculpture-nature_local.test\/en\/?p=3174"},"modified":"2016-11-16T11:05:23","modified_gmt":"2016-11-16T10:05:23","slug":"movement-as-the-essence-of-life-jean-tinguely-in-the-stedelijk-museum-amsterdam","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/sculpture-nature_local.test\/en\/movement-as-the-essence-of-life-jean-tinguely-in-the-stedelijk-museum-amsterdam\/","title":{"rendered":"Movement as the Essence of Life. Jean Tinguely in the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam"},"content":{"rendered":"

Say Jean Tinguely and people start smiling. Everybody knows his humourous moving machines of old bicycle wheels, rusted iron and scrap metal. Their sheer uselessness mocks the utility-thinking of the machine age. Which is the framework of The Machine Spectacle, <\/i>an exhibition the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. Over a hundred machine sculptures, films and drawings shed light on Tinguely\u2019s artistic development and ideas, from his love of absurd play, his mockery of the art world to his fascination for destruction and ephemerality.<\/span><\/p>\n

If you can, take the chance to visit. It\u2019s a great opportunity to see, hear and physically experience the moving sculptures. It\u2019s quite challenging for the Stedelijk Museum to operate them, given the fragile nature of their construction. That they don\u2019t work continuously only raises our expectancy. People are patiently waiting until Tinguely\u2019s M\u00e9ta-Machines<\/i> come to life, with their twirling or swaggering movements and creaking sounds. Each with its own character and expression. Tinguely addresses all our senses, and film fragments add to the dynamic atmosphere. The only thing lacking in this indoor exhibition are the profusing life-giving water jets of the Fountain Sculptures<\/i>. <\/span><\/p>\n

In 1944, the Swiss artist Jean Tinguely (1925 \u2013 1991) started his career in a Bazel department store as a freelance window dresser. People stood agape with wonder about his displays with rotating cogwheels of metal thread, influenced by Bazeler artists Walter Bodmer and Robbert M\u00fcller. Tinguely had a keen eye for new developments and publicity. At the Basel School of Design, he avidly absorbed the ideas of the early avant-garde. He was interested in Dada, Constructivism and Suprematism, when artists started to experiment with sculpture in motion. Tinguely was part of the kinetic art movement. With Alexander Calder and Pol Bury, he was one of the artists in the 1955 groundbreaking exhibition Le Mouvement<\/i> at Galerie Denise Ren\u00e9 in Paris. In 1961, he was co-curator and participant in the famous exhibition Bewogen Beweging<\/i> (Moved Movement), which featured 222 kinetic artworks at the Stedelijk Museum.<\/span><\/p>\n

In 1952, Tinguely moved to Paris, in the footsteps of his friend, the artist and dancer Daniel Spoerri. And in Paris he was to meet his second wife, the French artist Niki de Saint Phalle (1930-2002). They proved to be a productive couple, teaming up for his and her projects.<\/span><\/p>\n

Being frustrated by the static nature of art, Jean Tinguely chose to make moving sculptures. In his first works, dating from 1953-1959, Tinguely is inspired by Kasimir Malevich and Jean Arp. Powered by hidden engines, he literally sets abstract compositions in motion. But soon he abandons abstract art and falls in love with the machine. <\/span><\/p>\n

With his do-it-yourself drawing machines (M\u00e9ta-Matics<\/i>), and his self-destroying machines, Tinguely takes a critical stance toward art making, just like Marcel Duchamp did with his \u00ab\u00a0readymades\u00a0\u00bb. Duchamp is credited to be the first to introduce movement in sculpture. In 1913, he mounted a bicycle wheel on a stool and signed it. It was his first readymade. Duchamp wanted to question the cult of the individual artist and the deification of art objects in museums. And so did Tinguely. In 1959, he invited everyone to Galerie Iris Clert, to create an artwork with his M\u00e9ta-Matic<\/i> do-it-yourself drawing machine. You only had to press a button. Thus art was democratized, and it was mechanized. In the Machine Age, Mechanical Art<\/i> was the headline of an American newspaper in 1960.<\/span><\/p>\n