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Jean Tinguely «Homage to New York»
Jean Tinguely, «Homage to New York», 1960
© Jean Tinguely


 
Jean Tinguely «Homage to New York»Jean Tinguely «Homage to New York»
New York | United States | Archive / Collection: Museum of Modern Art, New York
 

 Jean Tinguely
«Homage to New York»

Jean Tinguely was asked in 1960 to produce a work to be performed in the Sculpture Garden of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In collaboration with other artists/engineers, among them Billy Klüver and Robert Rauschenberg, he produced a self-destroying mechanism that performed for 27 minutes during a public performance for invited guests. In the end, the public browsed the remnants of the machine for souvenirs to take home. This hommage to the energy of a city that keeps rebuilding itself time after time is a wonderful example of the different and sometimes conflicting conceptions of artists and engineers on how machines should work–and as such an early collaborative effort that foreshadowed the events staged by E.A.T.—as well as a document on the 60s with the rise of happening and performance.
See the vivid report by Billy Klüver.