- Méta-matic No. 9
- Métamatic No. 9
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Jean Tinguely is best known for his kinetic and mechanically animated sculptures that explore the aesthetics of movement. His sculptural machines are built of found or familiar objects and rudimentary parts, combining kineticism with the hallmarks of junk art.
Méta-matic No. 9, a machine for drawing, displays Tinguely's trademark wit and conceptual rigor. It critiques central tenets of art history, namely the role of the artistís hand in the production an artwork and the importance an object's unique status. Instead, this portable machine allows one to produce an abstract drawing automatically. Given the quality of materials used to construct the Méta-matic pieces, the resulting drawings are unpredictable and haphazard.
Ultimately, Méta-matic No. 9 is a work of art that functions as a machine to produce a limitless number of offspring artworks. "The machine is above all an instrument which permits me to be poetic," Tinguely said. "If you respect the machine, if you enter into a game with the machine, then perhaps you can make a truly joyous machine; by joyous I mean free."
ProvenanceThe artist; [Alexander Iolas Gallery, Paris]; given to MFAH, 1965.
Exhibition History"Tinguely: Meta," Galerie Alexandre Iolas, Paris, December 10, 1964–January 9, 1965.
"Jean Tinguely: Sculptures," The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, April 3–May 16, 1965.
"Sculpture by Jean Tinguely," Art Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi, September 8–October 1, 1977.
"Modernism in a Century of Change: From Object to Icon – The Art of Assemblage," The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, June 21–August 30, 1998.
"Chance Aesthetics," The Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, St. Louis, September 11, 2009–January 10, 2010.
"The Abstract Impulse: Selections from the Modern and Contemporary Collections," Tje Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, February 3–May 5, 2013.
"Selections from the Museum's Collection: Post-War Painting and Sculpture," Tje Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, May 5–September 5, 2016.
"Jean Tinguely and Jesús Rafael Soto," Nancy and Rich Kinder Building Inaugural Exhibition, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, November 15, 2020–ongoing.
Cataloguing data may change with further research.
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