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The Museum turns into a Production Hall
ART MACHINES   MACHINE ART
Basel, March 5 – June 29, 2008

Opening Tuesday, March 4, 2008, 18.30 hrs

  We all agree that art is created by artists. But what happens when  
machines start producing art? Do artists become simple engineers?  
What lies behind the artist’s withdrawal from the creative act, and  
what is its bearing on the originality and the uniqueness of the  
artwork? What can we then consider as the artwork: the machine, the  
final product or the process of creation? The exhibition jointly  
conceived and elaborated by Katharina Dohm of the Schirn Kunsthalle  
Frankfurt and Heinz Stahlhut of the Museum Tinguely, Basel, opens  
with a presentation of Jean Tinguely’s drawing machines dating back  
to the 1950s followed by art machines down to the present day; all of  
these have a common feature: they produce their own art. These  
machines created by Angela Bulloch, Olafur Eliasson, Damien Hirst,  
Rebecca Horn, Jon Kessler, Tim Lewis, Lia, Miltos Manetas, Cornelia  
Sollfrank, Antoine Zgraggen and Andreas Zybach transform the Museum  
Tinguely, Basel, into a production hall. Depending on the mechanical  
process involved, visitors may keep certain works such as drawings  
produced by Jean Tinguely’s Meta-Matics and certified stamped sheets  
produced by Damien Hirst’s or Olafur Eliasson’s machines.

  “People’s basic trust in machine activity, the basis of our  
industrial revolution and our affluence, is fundamentally alien to  
art’s self-understanding; and so art was very reticent to use  
machines to create itself. But to create a machine as an artwork and  
to shift responsibility to it for the development of further works of  
art abrogates the artist’s autonomy and transfers creativity to an  
apparatus. This raises an issue that is very much in vogue in view of  
today’s permanent shifting frontiers between the individual and  
technology.” (Guido Magnaguagno, Director Museum Tinguely and Max  
Hollein, Director, Schirn)

„If one accepts the general assumption that artists, not machines,  
are the originators and creators of works of art, then the  
discrepancy between the two could not be greater. For while the  
machine is conceived with an aim toward qualities like repeatability  
of production processes, art, as traditionally understood, is  
characterised by uniqueness. Tied to this is the idea of the artistic  
individual as a creative genius. And this concept gives rise to the  
question – serious as well as ironical – posed in this  
exhibition.” (Katharina Dohm and Heinz Stahlhut, curators of the  
exhibition)

To create a machine as an artwork and to entrust it with the  
responsibility of developing further artworks is a radical step. It  
means delegating creativity to a piece of equipment. Do such art  
machines then possess a “soul”? Indeed, they develop a dynamic of  
their own and enable the creation of an artwork that is an  
independent work – but they lack the capacity to lead the work to its  
conclusion. The machine with its automatic process does not posses  
the faculty of decision nor the possibility of selection. What is  
produced are mechanical works of art lacking the factor finality, but  
they are nevertheless a fundamental avowal of and testimony to the  
sovereignty of the machine and the basic belief in the possibilities  
of creative production beyond the act of the individual.

The exhibition „Art Machines Machine Art” opens with 20th century  
works by Jean Tinguely that raise the issue of the machine as an  
independent creative apparatus in the most original manner. His Méta- 
Matics that were first exhibited in Paris in 1959 and earned him his  
international renown are motor-driven drawing machines that enable  
the spectator to produce abstract drawings. The discrepancy between  
the material character of the Méta-Matics and their function, which  
is to produce art, can well be interpreted as an ironic comment on  
the overriding belief in those days in technical progress. It further  
also translates a reflex of the art context of the 1950s: the  
mechanically produced drawings are in keeping with the Tachist style  
in painting and thus reduce ad absurdum the idea of gestural  
abstraction as the direct expression of an artistic individual. This  
work group doubtless forms the historical basis of the exhibition.  
Grouped around it is a selection of works that share a common trait:  
the creative act is delegated by the artist to the machine – a  
process that was only possible at the end of the second world war  
when a generation of young artists appeared on the scene and broke  
with one of the best kept taboos of European art: the concept of the  
original work of art. The selection reflects this process in the most  
various art media such as painting, drawing, sculpture, video and  
ends with the greatest “art machine” ever, the World Wide Web,  
without, however, affording a definitive answer.

The visitor to the exhibition will encounter machines such as Rebecca  
Horn’s Preussische Brautmaschine and Michael Beutler’s installation  
Proper en Droog that concluded production before the exhibition’s  
opening, whereas Roxy Paine’s SCUMAK #2 produces throughout the  
duration of the exhibition, in this case organic-like sculptures. The  
drawing machines Making Beautiful Drawings by Damien Hirst and The  
endless study by Olafur Eliasson both require the involvement of the  
visitor and pose the basic question as to the relationship between  
onlooker and artwork. Whilst a physical phenomenon is at the source  
of Eliasson’s work, Hirst addresses the issue of the creative genius.  
Andreas Zybach’s Sich selbst reproduzierender Sockel contrary to its  
title does not auto-reproduce but requires an input by the visitor in  
the same manner that Angela Bulloch’s Blue Horizon needs an external  
impulse to begin drawing. Jon Kessler’s video installation Desert  
produces sunsets without end, and Tim Lewis’ Auto-Dali Prosthetic non- 
stop scrawls signatures. Pawel Althamer’s Extrusion Machine (Bottle  
Machine) produces blasphemous plastic bottles; thanks to Antoine  
Zgraggen’s Grosser Hammer and his Zerquetscherin the visitor can get  
rid of unwanted objects, and Tue Greenfort’s Mobile  
Trinkglaswerkstatt transforms glass bottles into drinking glasses.  
Finally, with the works of Lia, Miltos Manetas and Cornelia Sollfrank  
the “Méta art machine” enters into play – the World Wide Web –  
extending the possibility of democratising art production, as did  
Tinguely’s works in the 1950s.

The relationship between artist, artwork and onlooker is the theme,  
but not always at the basis of all the exhibits. The art machine  
enables furthermore the participation of the public and mass-produced  
art, thus breaking significantly with the aura of non-reproducible  
art. Even though the onlooker is not directly involved in the  
creation of some of the works, he/she does gain an insight into its  
production and is thus led to reflect on the issue as to where the  
work of art begins. The artist, however, will never disappear  
completely from the work of art. The art machine remains a tool as  
long as it functions within the parameters of the artist. It is only  
if and when it starts to act independently and react to situations  
autonomously that the whole question of authorship can change. The  
creativity of the art machine is apparent only when it works without  
control and haphazardly. The machine may be able to produce without  
the presence of the artist but it cannot exist without the artist’s  
concept.

An exhibition of the Museum Tinguely, Basel and Schirn Kunsthalle  
Frankfurt. Curators: Heinz Stahlhut (Museum Tinguely) / Katharina  
Dohm (Schirn).

Participating artists: Pawel Althamer, Michael Beutler, Angela  
Bulloch, Olafur Eliasson, Tue Greenfort, Damien Hirst, Rebecca Horn,  
Jon Kessler, Tim Lewis, Lia, Miltos Manetas, Roxy Paine, Steven  
Pippin, Cornelia Sollfrank, Jean Tinguely, Antoine Zgraggen, Andreas  
Zybach.

Catalogue: Art Machines Machine Art. Ed. Katharina Dohm, Heinz  
Stahlhut, Max Hollein and Guido Magnaguagno. Preface by Max Hollein  
and Guido Magnaguagno, Texts by Katharina Dohm and Heinz Stahlhut,  
and Justin Hoffmann and in-depth comments. German-English edition, c.  
160 pages, c. 130 col. & b&w illustrations, hard cover, Kehrer  
Verlag, Heidelberg, ISBN 9 783939 583400 (Price: CHF 49).

Museum Tinguely Paul Sacher Anlage 1 – CH 4002 BASEL – www.tinguely.ch

Press Release and images available for download on the Internet site  
www.tinguely.ch

For further information:

Annja Müller-Alsbach, Curator. Tel.: 00 41 (0)61 688 26 18. E-mail:  
[log in to unmask]

Laurentia Leon, Press Office. Tel.: 00 41 (0)61 687 46 08. E-mail:  
[log in to unmask]


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Paul Brown - based in OZ Dec 07 - Apr 08
mailto:[log in to unmask] == http://www.paul-brown.com
OZ Landline +61 (0)7 5443 3491 == USA fax +1 309 216 9900
OZ Mobile +61 (0)419 72 74 85 == Skype paul-g-brown
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Visiting Professor - Sussex University
http://www.cogs.susx.ac.uk/ccnr/research/creativity.html
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