Biography
Jean Tinguely
1925-1991

Jean Tinguely with ‘Moulin à Prière’ at Galerie Iolas, Paris, 1963, Photo: Monique Jacot

Jean Tinguely: life and work (1925–1991)

As a creator of kinetic works of art, Jean Tinguely counts among the great pioneering artists of the second half of the twentieth century. At the heart of his work was a preoccupation with the machine. What interested him most was how machines work, how they move, the noises they make and their intrinsic poetry.

 

Here is a biography divided into chapters outlining all the important stages in the artist’s life and work.

 

Childhood and apprenticeship
in Basel
1925-1953

Jean Tinguely at the age of sixteen, Photo: unknown

Childhood in Basel

Jean Charles Tinguely was born in Fribourg, Switzerland, on the 22nd of May 1925, the only child of Charles Célestin Tinguely and Jeanne Louise Tinguely-Ruffieux. Mother and son moved to Basel in July 1925, and it was there, in the Gundeldingen neighbourhood behind the Central Station, that Tinguely grew up. His father worked as a storekeeper for the Kohler Company, while his mother was a maid for Ch. Schlumberger-Vischer. The family found it difficult to integrate into a predominantly Protestant, German-speaking Basel. At home they spoke only French, and Tinguely was given a Catholic upbringing.

Later he distanced himself from the Catholic Church and was drawn instead towards Communism. One formative influence on the young Jean was Basel’s famous Fasnacht, which he was allowed to attend only once he was aged twelve.

 

Tinguely himself once said that his interest in machines, especially noisy machines, dated back to his early youth, when he experimented with mechanical contraptions pieced together out of sound-producing objects and waterwheels driven by forest streams.

Jean Tinguely with his parents in the 1930s, Photo: unknown

Jean Tinguely with his parents in the 1930s, Photo: unknown

Letter from ‘Globus Marktplatz’ branch to Charles Tinguely, 28.2.1942, copy, Museum Tinguely, Basel

Letter from ‘Globus Marktplatz’ branch to Charles Tinguely, 28.2.1942, copy, Museum Tinguely, Basel

Apprenticeship as a decorator

Tinguely commenced his apprenticeship as a decorator for the Globus department store in 1941. Lack of discipline at work led to his summary dismissal in August 1943. Luckily the independent decorator Joos Hutter took him under his wing, and after enabling him to complete his apprenticeship the following year, encouraged him to attend Basel’s School of Arts and Crafts. It was there that Tinguely first began to engage with works of modern art.

It was a piece of good fortune to attend the vocational art school. And there I experienced something else as well: that is, the new shock of contemporary art and the discovery of art itself, that art exists, especially the adventure that is the art of this century. Certainly the existence of (Kurt) Schwitters completely threw me. And it wasn’t easy to comprehend and perceive the being of Marcel Duchamp. You were familiarized with the ideology of Dadaism, with the message of the Russian Constructivists.

Jean Tinguely

It was at Basel’s School of Arts and Crafts that he met the woman who would later become his wife, Eva Aeppli.

Eva Aeppli (1925−2015)

Born in Zofingen on 2nd May 1925, Eva Aeppli grew up with her parents and three siblings in Basel. There, she attended the Rudolf Steiner School, which her father had co-founded. During the Second World War she attended courses at Basel’s School of Arts and Crafts and created her first fabric figures and glove puppets, which she sold through various outlets.

 

She and Jean Tinguely met at the School of Arts and Crafts, their daughter Miriam was born on 27th January 1950 and they married on 10th May 1951. Two years earlier Aeppli had begun what was to be a long and close friendship with Daniel Spoerri, whom the newly-weds followed to Paris. There Aeppli began producing fabric pictures and charcoal drawings, most of which were of people, many of them gaunt figures in a gloomy setting.

 

She created the first of her Les Livres de Vie, which eventually would comprise fifteen volumes, in 1954. These scrapbooks containing invitations to exhibitions, photos of friends, letters, tickets, drawings, notes and documents of all kinds, including a draft will, paint a vivid picture of Aeppli’s network of friends and fellow artists during this period. They also form the common thread in a life that in all other respects was one of constant change.

 

Aeppli separated from Tinguely in 1960, when she moved to Omaha, Nebraska, to live with her new husband, the American lawyer Samuel Mercer. The years that followed saw the creation of her second major block of works: large-format paintings done in oil on canvas, most of them showing numerous heads – skulls, but also stylised faces. They are morbidly redolent of death-bed portraits and of the photographs of mounds of corpses familiar to us from war zones and concentration camps.

 

Aeppli created her first textile sculptures – life-size figures with hauntingly expressive faces and long, slim hands – in the mid-sixties. She also produced single figures seated in armchairs like silent sentinels keeping watch over the world. Her fascination with astrology led her to create a range of figural groups, the first of which, called The Ten Planets, was exhibited at the 1976 Venice Biennale. All that she retained of those figures, however, was the heads, which in 1990 she had cast in bronze. Aeppli went on to produce still more groups of heads made of fine fabrics and subsequently cast in bronze – heads whose physiognomies capture deeply felt emotions.

 

Her last group of works dating from 1990 and 1991 consists of sculptures created together with Tinguely: morbid figures like the Hommage à Käthe Kollwitz (Kunstmuseum Solothurn). She also collaborated with other artists like Jean-Pierre Raynaud and Daniel Spoerri. Eva Aeppli died on 4th May 2015, just two days after her ninetieth birthday.

Freelance decorator in Basel

He spent the years 1944 to 1945 attending his compulsory military service with the Swiss Army. Otherwise, Tinguely and Eva Aeppli led an unconventional life and for a while lived in a condemned house, the now near-legendary Burghof on St. Alban-Vorstadt, near the Kunstmuseum Basel. It was during this period that Tinguely created the sculptures made of wire that are his earliest surviving works.

Jean made things on the ceiling with objects and motors – a little bit like Calder.

Eva Aeppli

‘Stabilé II’, c. 1948, 110 x 62 x 75 cm, Gordon D’Arcy, Basel, Photo: Christian Baur

‘Stabilé II’, c. 1948, 110 x 62 x 75 cm, Gordon D’Arcy, Basel, Photo: Christian Baur

To earn a living, Tinguely worked as a freelance decorator in Basel and Zurich; he also created window displays that before long were the talk of the town. What would later become Tinguely’s signature style is evident even in those early displays made of wire.

In the post-war period, as the economy picked up and consumer goods became more widely available, window displays became increasingly important. As a decorator, Tinguely had learned to design window displays which were attractive enough to catch the attention of passers-by, and hence potential customers. Similarly, the artworks that he created later were aimed not at a passive, contemplative audience, but demanded attention by being both intriguing and spectacular at the same time.

Display window at Kost-Sport, Freie Strasse, Basel, May 1949, Photo: Peter Moeschlin

Display window at Kost-Sport, Freie Strasse, Basel, May 1949, Photo: Peter Moeschlin

Paris:
Kinetic reliefs and sculptures
1953-1958

‘Méta-mécanique Horizontal II’ from 1954 with Eiffel Tower, 1958, Photo: John R. van Rolleghem

Impasse Ronsin

Tinguely and Aeppli moved to Paris in late 1952, leaving their daughter Miriam, born 27 January 1950, with Tinguely’s parents in Geneva. Their first few years in Paris were marred by poverty. Tinguely continued designing window displays, while Aeppli sold little rag dolls that she herself had sewn. They received support from their mutual friend, Daniel Spoerri, who had a small ballet stipend at his disposal. In 1955 Tinguely and his wife moved into a studio on the Impasse Ronsin in Paris.

Jean Tinguely at Impasse Ronsin, c. 1958, Photo: John R. van Rolleghem

Jean Tinguely at Impasse Ronsin, c. 1958, Photo: John R. van Rolleghem

Works on a platform in the studio at Impasse Ronsin, Paris, winter 1954, Photo: Rune Hassner

Works on a platform in the studio at Impasse Ronsin, Paris, winter 1954, Photo: Rune Hassner

Kinetic reliefs and sculptures

Tinguely worked at a breathtaking pace whilst living in the French capital and produced several different groups of kinetic reliefs and sculptures. After stepping up his work on moving automata, reliefs, and wire sculptures in 1954, he was invited to exhibit them in his first solo show at the Galerie Arnaud in Paris in the summer of the same year. With their clanking, juddering, anything but fine-tuned mechanisms, the kinetic works were constantly changing and hence were as much a product of chance as of design.

Tinguely's machines are anti-machines. One wants to find regularity and precision in machines. Tinguely researches mechanical disorder. The gears of his pictures have no other precision than that of arbitrariness. This art is based on the idea of the wheel, of repetition and of eternal change.

Pontus Hultén

Le Mouvement

When the Galerie Denise René staged an exhibition of kinetic art called ‘Le Mouvement’ in April 1955, Tinguely was able to contribute four of his most important groups of work to date.

 

This was the first major overview of kinetic art as a genre in its own right. Among the works on show alongside Tinguely’s were Marcel Duchamp’s Rotary Demisphere of 1925, two mobiles by Alexander Calder, and various pieces by Tinguely’s contemporaries, Yaacov Agam, Jesús Rafael Soto, Victor Vasarely, Pol Bury, Robert Jacobsen, Richard Mortensen, and Robert Breer. Also included in the exhibition was a programme of abstract films from the period 1918–1935.

All the artists of that period who experimented with movement began with an abstract, purely geometrical language of forms. The kinetic aspect of their works manifested itself in a wide range of ways and could be either purely optical or entail the movement of the object itself. While some works needed interaction, that is to say, manipulation on the part of visitors, others, like Tinguely’s, were driven by motors. Calder’s mobiles, in contrast, were set in motion merely by the air circulating in the room. There were several groups of works by Tinguely on show. In addition to the many Méta-Malevichs (mechanical reliefs), there were a number of Méta-Herbin-type, free-standing sculptures, a Volume Virtuel, and his first drawing machine, the Machine à dessiner I. One of the sculptures on show, the Sculpture méta-mécanique automobile, was set up on the floor and had to be wound up with a hand crank. That done, the wheels of the mechanism began to turn, and the sculpture itself began to move around the gallery.

Roger Bordier on Tinguely’s Works on View at the Exhibition ‘Le Mouvement’

‘His animated works are, after Calder’s mobiles and for that matter in an altogether different direction, the most important achievement with respect to movement and the transformable work. They open a very vast field to present experiments, and one can say that Tinguely has indeed laid the basis for a new art adapted to the classical formula of the painting. Its elements, rounds and bars, move smoothly, pass in front of one another, create and recreate ceaselessly new figures thanks in particular to the use of a special small electric motor. These elements, too, are set in motion differently, they don’t rotate at the same rate, the transmission by rubber further increases the possibilities of irregularity of speed, et cetera. (…)

 

Since then he has again turned to the conquest of the three dimensions by obliging these same reliefs to occupy the whole space. From this point of view his most curious achievement up to now is the Sculpture méta-mécanique automobile which can be wound up like a child’s toy and moves all by itself, gaily waving in all directions and never in the same way (thanks again to that refusal of synchronous movement) its rods, circles, semi-circles, et cetera with their yellow, red, white colours. Tinguely has in short produced an abstract mechanical dance, and this is an application about which we shall have more to say.’

Jean Tinguely and Yves Klein at the courtyard of Impasse Ronsin with ‘Excavatrice de l'espace’ and ‘La Vitesse totale’, 1958, Photo: Martha Rocher

Jean Tinguely and Yves Klein at the courtyard of Impasse Ronsin with ‘Excavatrice de l'espace’ and ‘La Vitesse totale’, 1958, Photo: Martha Rocher

Jean Tinguely and Yves Klein

Tinguely first met Yves Klein in 1955. He was especially impressed by Klein’s ‘Le Vide’ exhibition at the Galerie Iris Clert in 1958, for which the artist emptied the gallery of everything except a single vitrine and painted the entire interior white, but without actually exhibiting anything. By November of the same year, Klein and Tinguely were able to exhibit some of their joint creations at the same gallery. The mechanical contraptions themselves were built by Tinguely, while the coloured dials were the work of Klein. The idea was to make the dials spin so fast that they could no longer be read, becoming instead just single blobs of colour.

It was through Klein that Tinguely came to have a hand in decorating interior of the music theatre in Gelsenkirchen, the contract for which had been awarded to Klein and the architect Werner Ruhnau. Tinguely’s involvement with Klein and his quest for ways of expressing the virtual and the immaterial ultimately bore fruit in his own works about time, as is especially evident in his intricate, virtual line-producing Variations.

Yves Klein (1928–1962)

The painter, sculptor, and performance artist Yves Klein is best known for his monochrome paintings, many of them painted in bold, radiant, ultramarine. Klein grew up in Paris and Nice. He was not only an artist, but also a successful judoka.

 

After numerous stays abroad, including in Great Britain, Spain, and Japan, he settled in Paris in 1955 and there made the acquaintance of the art critic Pierre Restany. So fond was Klein of the blue that he obtained by combining ultramarine pigment with a resin binder that in 1960 he had it patented as International Klein Blue (I.K.B.). In 1957 he began staging happenings – sometimes accompanied by music – called Anthropometries, in the course of which female models were painted with his signature blue paint and then imprinted themselves on large sheets of paper.

 

The goal that Klein had set himself was that of ‘immaterial sensibility’. His exhibition ‘Le Vide’ (‘La Spécialisation de la sensibilité à lʼétat matière première en sensibilité picturale stabilisé’) at the Galerie Iris Clert in 1958, like his Leap into the Void of 1960, likewise attracted considerable attention. He also experimented with the elements fire, water, and air. It was in this context that he created his Cosmogenies, which were influenced by wind and rain, as well as his fire paintings.

 

Klein was a member of the Nouveaux Réalistes, a group that came into being in Paris in 1960. He was also part of a close-knit network of European artists that included members of the ZERO group as well as various Italian artists such as Piero Manzoni. In 1958 and 1959 Klein worked on the interior design of the music theatre in Gelsenkirchen built by the architect Werner Ruhnau, for which he developed monumental, blue sponge reliefs. Klein died prematurely of a heart attack in 1962.

Méta-Matics
1959

Jean Tinguely with ‘Méta-Matic No. 9, Scorpion’, 1959, Photo: Hansjörg Stoecklin

Do It Yourself

Tinguely invented his Méta-Matic drawing machines in 1959. The invitation to his exhibition at the Galerie Iris Clert challenged all those who attended to produce their own works of art. By the time the works went on show, however, Tinguely had already filed a patent application for his machines. The interactive Méta-Matics enabled Tinguely to question and cast doubt on the classical relationship between the creative artist, work, and viewer.

Tinguely also launched a 50,000-franc Iris Clert Prize to be awarded to the best Méta-Matic drawing selected by a high-calibre jury made up of Jean Arp, Pierre Restany, and Yves Klein. For the equivalent of three Swiss francs, visitors could purchase a token with which to set the machine in motion. Tinguely promoted his exhibition by distributing flyers in cafés and bars and before long had attracted large numbers of visitors, who with their 4,000 machine-made drawings, turned the show into a great commercial success. Even Marcel Duchamp, an artist Tinguely greatly revered, tried his hand at a Méta-Matic drawing.

Hans Arp at the exhibition ‘les Méta - Matics de Tinguely: les sculptures qui peignent’ at the Galerie Iris Clert, Paris, 1959, Photo: Hansjörg Stoecklin

Hans Arp at the exhibition ‘les Méta - Matics de Tinguely: les sculptures qui peignent’ at the Galerie Iris Clert, Paris, 1959, Photo: Hansjörg Stoecklin

Biennale de Paris

Tinguely presented his Méta-Matic No. 17 in action at the opening of the first Biennale de Paris at the Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris in October 1959. Besides moving around freely, creating drawings outside the museum, the mobile drawing machine driven by a petrol engine also squirted lily-of-the-valley scent and inflated a large balloon literally to bursting point. Tinguely also built a portable Méta-Matic with which to advertise his exhibition in bars all over Paris. Méta-Matic No. 17 was the great sensation of the exhibition and for Tinguely marked the apogee of his meteoric rise to fame in those early years.

Pontus Hultén and Jean Tinguely at the Galerie Samlaren in Stockholm, 1955, Photo: Hans Nordenström

Pontus Hultén and Jean Tinguely at the Galerie Samlaren in Stockholm, 1955, Photo: Hans Nordenström

Networker Tinguely

Crucial to Tinguely’s success as a celebrated artist was his capacity to make friends. He was what we would now call a born networker. His friendship with the Swedish art historian Pontus Hultén, for example, began in connection with the exhibition at the Galerie Arnaud in 1954. But he soon had contacts abroad as well and had an exhibition in Milan as early as 1954 as well as another at a gallery in Stockholm the following year. Tinguely and Aeppli first met Niki de Saint Phalle and her husband Harry Mathews in 1956, when the latter couple visited Tinguely’s studio and purchased one of his reliefs. The year 1958 saw a strengthening of Tinguely’s ties to Yves Klein as well as the art historian Pierre Restany, and the gallerist Iris Clert, who exhibited his installation Mes étoiles – Concert pour sept peintures at her gallery in Paris.

It was Klein, moreover, who introduced Tinguely into the Düsseldorf art scene, especially the Galerie Schmela, which in 1959 hosted a show of his works. Tinguely was henceforth in contact with the artists of the ZERO group, among them Heinz Mack, Otto Piene, and Günther Uecker, as well as the champions of Fluxus John Cage and Nam June Paik. He even inspired the former group to begin motorising their own works. So Tinguely’s European network was far-flung even then: in 1959, for example, he had an exhibition at the Kaplan Gallery in London and took part in a group show called ‘Motion in Vision/Vision in Motion’ in Antwerp, for which he also acted as co-curator.

Pontus Hultén (1924–2006)

Pontus Hultén was born in Stockholm in 1924. After studying art for a year in Copenhagen, he switched to the University of Stockholm, where from 1945 to 1951 he studied art history and ethnography.

 

He went on to work for museums and exhibitions in Sweden and Paris, as well as producing various films. Hultén was appointed director of the new Moderna Museet in Stockholm in 1959 and remained there until 1973. He then became the founding director of a whole succession of museums and institutions of renown: the Musée Nationale d’Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou (1973–1981), MOCA, Los Angeles (1981–1982), the Institut des Hautes Etudes en Arts Plastiques, Paris (1983–1992), the Palazzo Grassi, Venice (1985–1990), the Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, Bonn (1990–1994), and the Museum Jean Tinguely, Basel (1995–1997).

 

Hultén was the curator of some of the twentieth century’s ground-breaking exhibitions: he was involved in the organisation of ‘Le Mouvement’ of 1955 at the Galerie Denise René and of ‘Bewogen Beweging’ of 1960–1962 at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, Moderna Museet in Stockholm, and the Louisiana in Denmark, and he also curated the shows ‘HON – en katedral’ of 1966 at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm, ‘The Machine as Seen at the End of the Mechanical Age’ of 1968 at the MoMA, New York, and ‘Futurismo e futurismi’ of 1986 at the Palazzo Grassi in Venice. Together with Jean Clair, moreover, he curated the first retrospective of the works of Marcel Duchamp, which opened at the Centre Pompidou in 1977.

 

Hultén opened the museum to experimental exhibition formats as well as pioneering the idea of a peripheral programme of readings, film screenings, and concerts. He cultivated personal contacts to numerous artists, promoting their careers early on, and following their development thereafter. He also possessed a large art collection of his own, which a year before his death he gifted to the Moderna Museet. Those parts of Hultén’s archive that concern Jean Tinguely are now housed in the archive of the Museum Tinguely in Basel.

The turning
point of 1960:
auto-destructive art

‘Homage to New York’, 1960

Für Statik

Tinguely organised his first actions and happenings as early as 1959, when he allegedly dropped 150,000 flyers bearing his manifesto ‘Für Statik’ onto the city of Düsseldorf from a small aeroplane. The performance came to the public’s notice only through the photographs of Charles Wilp and doubts as to whether the flyers were ever actually dropped have persisted to this day.

Jean Tinguely, ‘Für Statik’ (For Statics), flyer, March 1959, Archive Museum Tinguely, Basel

Jean Tinguely, ‘Für Statik’ (For Statics), flyer, March 1959, Archive Museum Tinguely, Basel

Jean Tinguely in an aeroplane with the manifesto ‘Für Statik’ (For Statics) , Düsseldorf, 1959, Photo: Charles Wilp

Jean Tinguely in an aeroplane with the manifesto ‘Für Statik’ (For Statics) , Düsseldorf, 1959, Photo: Charles Wilp

‘Art, Machines, and Motion: A Lecture by Jean Tinguely’, Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, 12.11.1959, Photo: John Cox

‘Art, Machines, and Motion: A Lecture by Jean Tinguely’, Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, 12.11.1959, Photo: John Cox

ICA

In November of the same year, Tinguely was invited to give a talk on ‘Art, Machines, and Motion’ at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London. The evening was broken up into several parts, including a demonstration of a bicycle-like drawing machine driven by two cyclists, which all but buried the audience under reams of paper.

Homage to New York

The real turning point in Tinguely’s career, however, came with his Homage to New York on 17 March 1960, when he premiered the world’s first auto-destructive work of art in the sculpture garden of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The machine was made of assorted objects that Tinguely had found in the scrapyards and junk shops of New Jersey: motors, a weather balloon, steel tubes, numerous bicycle parts, a piano, a radio, and much more besides. The artist Robert Rauschenberg also took part in the action with a small sculpture of his own. The invited guests looked on as the monumental machine Homage to New York auto-destructed before their very eyes.

Almost nothing went according to plan, which appeared not to trouble Tinguely very much. Among the 200 spectators were fellow artists Robert Breer, Robert Rauschenberg, John Cage, Barnett Newman, Adja Yunkers, Philip Guston, and Mark Rothko, as well as important collectors such as Walter Arensberg and John D. Rockefeller III. The work made Tinguely famous all over the United States literally over night and assured him of a place in the annals of art history.

This intensive life of this machine is the cause of autodestruction

Jean Tinguely

Jean Tinguely in the middle of Homage to New York during the performance in the sculpture garden of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1960, photo: David Gahr

One particularly good example was a work that I demonstrated to the public in New York. The machine was simply there, without the culture establishment somehow having managed to absorb it, make it museum-suitable, frame it, conserve it. It was a gleaming work of art and it vanished. It had no value, no sense, a refined thing that was in no way commercial ... In no way was this a search for stability. Total instability in vanishing, in smoke, and in the return to the trash can.

Jean Tinguely

Jean Tinguely’s action ‘Le Transport’, which took place between his atelier in Impasse Ronsin and the Galerie des Quatre Saisons, Paris, 13.05.1960, Photo: Christer Strömholm

Jean Tinguely’s action ‘Le Transport’, which took place between his atelier in Impasse Ronsin and the Galerie des Quatre Saisons, Paris, 13.05.1960, Photo: Christer Strömholm

Le Transport

Tinguely’s travels in the USA ushered in a new phase of work as his kinetic reliefs and Méta-Matics were supplanted by generally loud, cacophonous machines crudely welded together out of pieces of junk and scrap metal, which the artist preferred to leave unpainted. After his return from New York, the Galerie des 4 Saisons staged an exhibition called ‘L’art fonctionnel de Tinguely’ at its showrooms in Paris. To transport his works from the studio to the gallery, Tinguely recruited several friends and laid on a parade-like happening called simply Le Transport.

An End of the world

Over the next two years, he staged still more destructive performances that were variously interpreted as warnings against society’s over-reliance on technology, as a way of detaching art from matter, and as critique of the custodial, conservationist function of the museum as institution.

No. 1

The auto-destructive installation Étude pour une fin du monde No. 1, for example, formed part of the opening festivities for an exhibition at the Louisiana Museum in Denmark in 1961. 

The performance was to begin with the last-minute escape of a live dove built into the machine – here symbolising a world doomed to destruction just moments later – followed by a runaway doll’s pram, a blaring siren, a crazed rocking horse, the shooting down of an effigy of Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, and the ignition of numerous rockets that whizzed up into the sky and detonated. It ended with the French flag parachuting back down to earth where, to the enthusiastic applause of the Danish audience, it was retrieved by Tinguely himself, elegantly clad in a dark suit and tie.

No. 2

Tinguely staged his Study for an End of the World No. 2 for the TV network NBC in the Mojave Desert in Nevada on 21 March 1962. An NBC film crew followed the artist himself and Niki de Saint Phalle foraging for materials, building the contraption, and then transporting everything to the site of the happening: a dry salt lake 35 km south of Las Vegas. Not everything went according to plan during the half-hour-long performance, in the course of which numerous fireworks were set off and 100 sticks of dynamite ignited. The remote fuses worked only sporadically so that Tinguely had to do the job manually in some instances. His Studies for an End of the World must be viewed against the backdrop of the Cold War and imminent threat of nuclear war.

Changes of 1960

Tinguely’s success as an artist manifested itself in his first solo show in a museum at the Haus Lange in Krefeld in 1960. On 27 October of that year he and Yves Klein together with six other artists and the art critic Pierre Restany signed the manifesto of a new group who called themselves the Nouveaux Réalistes. Tinguely marked the group’s tenth anniversary by staging his last major auto-destructive performance, a work called La Vittoria, in front of Milan Cathedral in 1970. La Vittoria was a 10-metre-high phallus made of papier-mâché, spiked with fireworks, and then set on fire.

 

The year 1960 saw some important changes for Tinguely in his personal life, too. Eva Aeppli left him and her place on the Impasse Ronsin was taken by Niki de Saint Phalle. Aeppli nevertheless remained an important person in the lives of both Tinguely and Niki de Saint Phalle.

Jean Tinguely, destruction of ‘La Vittoria’, Piazza del Duomo, Milan, 27.11.1970, Photo: Estate Leonardo Bezzola

Jean Tinguely, destruction of ‘La Vittoria’, Piazza del Duomo, Milan, 27.11.1970, Photo: Estate Leonardo Bezzola

Nouveaux Réalistes

It was the French art critic Pierre Restany who persuaded the group of artists who had gathered in Yves Klein’s apartment on 27 October 1960 to form an avant-garde group committed to Nouveau Réalisme. The group’s manifesto, designed by Yves Klein and executed in the colours blue, pink, and gold, was signed initially by Arman, François Dufrêne, Raymond Hains, Yves Klein, Martial Raysse, Daniel Spoerri, Jean Tinguely and Jacques Villeglé, later to be joined by César, Christo, Gérard Deschamps, Mimmo Rotella, and Niki de Saint Phalle. In terms of artistic praxis, the Nouveaux Réalistes were a heterogeneous bunch, what they had in common was their incorporation of found materials and everyday objects into works of art. These ranged from the poster designs of the Affichists (Dufrêne, Hains, Villeglé) to the use of objets trouvés in the collages and assemblages of Arman, Spoerri, de Saint Phalle, and Tinguely. ‘Nouveau Réalisme = a new approach to the capacity to perceive the real’ – proclaimed their slogan. Their aim was to set themselves apart from abstract art by returning to the reality of everyday life, their ultimate goal being a synthesis of art and life. Their ‘actions-spectacles’ were intended to provoke spontaneous, direct involvement on the part of their audiences. The neo-avant-garde movement ended with the celebration of its tenth anniversary in Milan in 1970.

Eva Aeppli and Niki de Saint Phalle, Paris, 1962, Photo: Vera Mercer; © Vera Mercer/courtesy °CLAIR Galerie

Eva Aeppli and Niki de Saint Phalle, Paris, 1962, Photo: Vera Mercer; © Vera Mercer/courtesy °CLAIR Galerie

Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely in the courtyard of Impasse Ronsin, 1962, Photo: Vera Mercer; © Vera Mercer/courtesy °CLAIR Galerie

Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely in the courtyard of Impasse Ronsin, 1962, Photo: Vera Mercer; © Vera Mercer/courtesy °CLAIR Galerie

Black sculptures from the mid-1960s

Jean Tinguely constructing ‘Heureka’ in Lausanne, 1964, Photo: Monique Jacot

Expo 64

Tinguely achieved his breakthrough in Switzerland in the winter of 1963/64 when he created the sculpture Heureka for the Swiss Expo in Lausanne. He had been commissioned to build a beacon for the Department of Defence’s section and the result was a giant machine that he painted all over in black.

Tinguely drew inspiration for his Heureka from the Russian Constructivist Vladimir Tatlin. It was his largest and most expensive machine to date, built mainly out of new, high-quality materials. It now stands at the Zürichhorn in Zurich.

Everything is moving more than ever in the present age – totally and absolutely. What I mean is that movement is really something that we are now feeling in every way – through the machine and through the mechanisation of our age.

Jean Tinguely

Exhibition view, Gimpel & Hanover Galerie Zürich, 1966, Photo: Hans Emil Staub

Exhibition view, Gimpel & Hanover Galerie Zürich, 1966, Photo: Hans Emil Staub

Black sculptures

Heureka became the trademark showpiece of the Lausanne Expo as well as ushering in a new phase in the artist’s oeuvre. The black-painted sculptures that ensued seem much more homogeneous than many other bodies of work by Tinguely; he downplayed the assemblage aspect and gave much more prominence to the machine’s actual movements. Tinguely then took single elements of Heureka and built on them to create a series of independent sculptures called the Chars, whose martial movements are reminiscent of ancient war chariots. The Chars also invite comparison with another subgroup of the black sculptures that Tinguely produced later on in the sixties, namely the Bascules, whose pendulum swings in defiance of gravity recall acrobats and trapeze artistes flying gracefully through the air.

Another notable product of Tinguely’s ‘black period’ is Hannibal II. This colossal machine was acquired by the Basler Verkehrsverein following a successful fund-raising drive in 1968, and for many years was installed in its premises at Schifflände in Basel.

World fair in Montreal

Tinguely made two contributions to Expo 67 in Montreal: one was a black, wall-mounted relief called Requiem pour une feuille morte for the Swiss pavilion and the other a sculpture garden called Le Paradis fantastique, created together with Niki de Saint Phalle for the French pavilion.

Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely, ‘Paradis fantastique’, Montreal, 1967, Photo: Harry Shunk and János Kender

Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely, ‘Paradis fantastique’, Montreal, 1967, Photo: Harry Shunk and János Kender

Jean and I proposed filling the roof with a monumental ensemble of sculptures, which was to represent a joyous combat between Jean’s black masculine figures and my sculptures with round feminine forms and vibrantly colored designs. A game ... with no winners and no losers.

Niki de Saint Phalle

Jean Tinguely, ‘Chaos No 1 in Columbus (Indiana)’, 1973, 35 x 50,6 cm, print, Museum Tinguely, Basel

Jean Tinguely, ‘Chaos No 1 in Columbus (Indiana)’, 1973, 35 x 50,6 cm, print, Museum Tinguely, Basel

Chaos No. 1

Another black monumental sculpture, Chaos No. 1, was commissioned by Cummins Inc. of Columbus, Indiana, in 1973 for installation in a shopping mall called The Commons. Tinguely built Chaos No. 1 with the help of Seppi Imhof, while Bernhard Luginbühl flew in with his wife to provide technical support. The contraption, which weighs 7 tons, is pieced together out of numerous wheels and motors and even has a ball track supplied by conveyor belt with a steady stream of iron balls. One especially striking feature of the piece is the huge worm drill poking up into the air. Chaos No. 1 was actually only completed in 1974.

Soisy-sur-École and Neyruz

From 1969, Tinguely began shuttling back and forth between two homes: in addition to Soisy-sur-École, a former guesthouse that he shared with Niki de Saint Phalle; he also spent some of his time in Switzerland, to be more precise in Neyruz near Fribourg. The same year also saw the birth of Milan Gygax, son of Jean Tinguely and his new partner, Micheline Gygax.

 

Joint projects of the 1960s and 1970s

Niki de Saint Phalle and Jean Tinguely in front of ‘HON’ at Moderna Museet in Stockholm, 1966, Photo: Hans Hammarskiöld, © Hans Hammarskiöld Heritage

I have always tried to work together with other artists, if only to get beyond myself. Because sometimes I feel like I’m trapped inside myself, and forced to be myself, I feel like one condemned. I cannot do otherwise than what I do.

Jean Tinguely

Daniel Spoerri and Jean Tinguely, Paris, 1962, Photo: Vera Mercer; © Vera Mercer/courtesy °CLAIR Galerie

Daniel Spoerri and Jean Tinguely, Paris, 1962, Photo: Vera Mercer; © Vera Mercer/courtesy °CLAIR Galerie

Daniel Spoerri and Jean Tinguely, Paris, 1962, Photo: Vera Mercer; © Vera Mercer/courtesy °CLAIR Galerie

Daniel Spoerri and Jean Tinguely, Paris, 1962, Photo: Vera Mercer; © Vera Mercer/courtesy °CLAIR Galerie

Bewogen Beweging

Jean Tinguely thrived on intensive dialogue and collaboration with other artists. In the course of time, he also increasingly took on the role of co-curator of group shows of kinetic art. Even as early as 1959, for example, he shared curatorial responsibility for the exhibition ‘Motion in Vision/Vision in Motion’ at the Hessenhuis in Antwerp. And not only were his own works central to ‘Bewogen Beweging’, the major touring exhibition of kinetic art that opened at the Stedelijk in Amsterdam in 1961, but Tinguely himself was active as its co-curator – alongside Daniel Spoerri and Pontus Hultén.

Installing ‘Bewogen Beweging’, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, 1961

Installing ‘Bewogen Beweging’, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, 1961

The artists of the exhibition ‘Dylaby’: Per Olof Ultvedt, Robert Rauschenberg, Martial Raysse, Daniel Spoerri, Jean Tinguely, Niki de Saint Phalle, Stockholm, 1962, Photo: Christer Strömholm

The artists of the exhibition ‘Dylaby’: Per Olof Ultvedt, Robert Rauschenberg, Martial Raysse, Daniel Spoerri, Jean Tinguely, Niki de Saint Phalle, Stockholm, 1962, Photo: Christer Strömholm

Exhibition ‘Dylaby’, room with balloons by Jean Tinguely, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, 1962, Photo: Christer Strömholm

Exhibition ‘Dylaby’, room with balloons by Jean Tinguely, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, 1962, Photo: Christer Strömholm

Dylaby

Dylaby, the dynamic labyrinth that Tinguely co-curated in the autumn of 1962, again at the Stedelijk, was a new kind of interactive installation set up over a period of just three weeks by Tinguely himself along with selected fellow artists: Niki de Saint Phalle, Per Olof Ultvedt, Robert Rauschenberg, Daniel Spoerri, and Martial Raysse. Like a fun fair, Dylaby comprised several different stations, each of which offered visitors a different kind of experience, whether optical, physical, acoustic, or psychic.

Visitors to Dylaby could shoot at a relief with bags of paint built into it, could grope their way through a blacked-out room full of objects, or could dance the Twist next to an inflatable pool. There was an anti-gravitational room by Spoerri and a room full of balloons by Tinguely. All these obstacles, and others like them, had to be overcome. Tinguely’s personal contribution to Dylaby consisted in a radio sculpture and a work called Baluba Homage à Anton Müller.

Niki de Saint Phalle (1930–2002)

Niki de Saint Phalle, daughter of a French father and an American mother, grew up mainly in the United States. After leaving school she worked initially as a model, but at the age of eighteen ran away with Harry Mathews. The couple married and moved to Paris, where they lived from 1952. They also had two children together. De Saint Phalle’s first paintings, which had everyday objects integrated into them, date from 1953.

 

De Saint Phalle and her husband first met Eva Aeppli and Jean Tinguely in 1956. In 1960, after divorcing Mathews, Niki de Saint Phalle moved into Tinguely’s studio on the Impasse Ronsin. The two artists were henceforth a couple, but married only in 1971.

 

De Saint Phalle first attracted notice in artistic circles with her ‘shootings’, which she herself called Tirs, of 1961. These were plaster reliefs with objets trouvés and bags full of paint built into them, which the artist shot at with a rifle in skilfully staged ‘shootings’, some of which were public.

 

From 1963 Niki de Saint Phalle and Tinguely lived in Soisy-sur-École near Fontainebleau. It was there that she began producing figures and reliefs of women and monsters, executed as assemblages made of papier-mâché, often with woollen yarn glued onto them. The first Nanas made of wool and fabric also date from this period. De Phalle at first described these figures as symbols of happy, liberated women, but later cast them rather as precursors of a new, matriarchal age.

 

Her first retrospective took place at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam in 1967, the year in which she began making figures out of polyester. De Saint Phalle later incurred serious respiratory problems as a result of her inhalation of polyester vapours and dust while making these works.

 

De Saint Phalle and Tinguely worked together not only on large-scale projects like Dylaby, Hon, and Le Cyclop, in which several artists had a hand, but they also created numerous works involving just the two of them. Their Le Paradis fantastique, for example, was a French government commission for Expo 67 in Montreal, while their Fontaine Stravinsky in Paris was unveiled in 1983. Tinguely also provided the technical know-how for de Saint Phalle’s projects Jardin des Tarots, Le Golem, and Le Dragon, as well as helping her with setting up. De Saint Phalle began building her Tarot Garden, the apogee of her work with walk-in installations and sculptural ensembles, in 1979. She would continue working on it for a further fifteen years before it was finally opened.

 

The artist suffered recurrent bouts of pulmonary disease as well as rheumatoid arthritis. She died in California at the age of seventy-one in 2002.

Hon

So thrilled with Dylaby was Pontus Hultén that he expressed an interest in showing it at the Modern Museet in Stockholm. This project actually went ahead only in 1966, however, and then only in a modified form, since what Tinguely, de Saint Phalle, and Per Olof Ultvedt installed in Stockholm was not a labyrinth at all, but Hon – an katedral (She – a cathedral). Hon was actually a giant, 28-metre-long, reclining female figure in the style of Niki de Saint Phalle’s Nanas.

Visitors entered the work through the vagina and once inside encountered a milk bar, a gallery with forged works of art, a bottle-smashing machine, a chute, and a viewing point. Tinguely’s radio sculptures could also be seen and heard.

 

The group of artists made the acquaintance of Rico Weber, a Swiss fluent in both Swiss German and Swedish, who worked at the museum canteen and whom they recruited on the spot to help them build the monumental sculpture and who afterwards stayed on as an assistant to both Tinguely and Niki de Saint Phalle.

Construction of ‘HON’ at Moderna Museet, Stockholm, 1966, Photo: Hans Hammarskiöld, © Hans Hammarskiöld Heritage

Construction of ‘HON’ at Moderna Museet, Stockholm, 1966, Photo: Hans Hammarskiöld, © Hans Hammarskiöld Heritage

Jean Tinguely and Claude Parent, ‘Lunatour − Labyrinthe dynamique’ (detail), 1964, drawing, 83 x 269 cm, Museum Tinguely, Basel

Jean Tinguely and Claude Parent, ‘Lunatour − Labyrinthe dynamique’ (detail), 1964, drawing, 83 x 269 cm, Museum Tinguely, Basel

Jean Tinguely and Bernhard Luginbühl, project ‘Kulturstation − Gigantoleum’, 1968, reproduction coloured with felt tip pen and ballpoint pen, Museum Tinguely, Basel

Jean Tinguely and Bernhard Luginbühl, project ‘Kulturstation − Gigantoleum’, 1968, reproduction coloured with felt tip pen and ballpoint pen, Museum Tinguely, Basel

Culture stations

The combinations of sculpture and architecture that Tinguely produced from the 1960s were intended to amuse and entertain. Yet neither his Lunatour – Labyrinthe dynamique, a work created with Claude Parent that was to have been an incredible 110 metres high, nor a joint project with Bernhard Luginbühl called Gigantoleum (1968) ever advanced beyond the drawing board. In 1970, however, Tinguely at last had an opportunity to go ahead with his idea of a ‘culture station’ – as he himself called it – for which a couple by the name of de Menil placed an area of forest in Milly-la-Forêt at his disposal. The project was to be called Le Cyclop, and it was with this in mind that in the summer of that year, Tinguely hired the trained mechanic, Seppi Imhof, to be his assistant. The actual work on the sculpture in the forest – a monumental, walk-in head, 22 metres high – began only in 1971 and was brought to fruition by a concerted effort on the part of several artists.

Le Cyclop is also a friendship sculpture in that it shows how essential personal relationships were both to Tinguely’s work and to his joint projects undertaken with friends. The design for the mirrored, one-eyed face was the work of Niki de Saint Phalle. Its long tongue, down which water flows into a basin, was originally conceived as a water chute. Tinguely also integrated a giant ball track and a sound-producing Méta-Harmonie. The ‘monster in the woods’ also features a railcar by Eva Aeppli recalling the Nazi instigated deportations, a Compression by César, a pinball machine by Bernhard Luginbühl, a room tilted through 90 degrees by Daniel Spoerri, as well as works by Arman, Jesús Rafael Soto, Larry Rivers, and others. Installed on the roof of the construction is a reflecting pool conceived as a Hommage à Yves Klein. And because Le Cyclop was equipped with a rudimentary kitchen and places to sleep, the artists were able to actually inhabit it for a while.

 

Le Cyclop, a joint project and Gesamtkunstwerk financed by Tinguely himself, was actually completed only after his death in 1991.

Crocrodrome

Pontus Hultén invited Jean Tinguely and Bernhard Luginbühl to create a giant sculpture for the opening of the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris in 1977. The result was the Crocrodrome created in collaboration with Daniel Spoerri. Tinguely not only designed the body of the dragon, adding rods and wheels to lend it a spiky ‘back’, but he also integrated a ball track and neon writing into the piece.

 

Music machines
and
large mechanisms from 1978

Exhibition view ‘Méta-Harmonie I’ (detail) with visitors, Hammerausstellung, Galerie Felix Handschin, Basel, 1978, Photo: Leonardo Bezzola

Hammer Exhibition

Tinguely took part in Felix Handschin’s ‘Hammer Exhibition’ in a disused factory in Basel in the autumn of 1978. It was his desire to create something spectacular for that show that led to the creation of his first Méta-Harmonie. The Méta-Harmonies are huge, motorised mechanisms fitted with all sorts of different musical and above all percussion instruments. Once in action they not only make a terrific din but are a visual, almost theatrical experience.

Jean Tinguely installing ‘Méta-Harmonie I’, Hammerausstellung, Galerie Felix Handschin, Basel, 1978, Photo: Leonardo Bezzola

Jean Tinguely installing ‘Méta-Harmonie I’, Hammerausstellung, Galerie Felix Handschin, Basel, 1978, Photo: Leonardo Bezzola

Exhibition view of ‘Méta-Harmonie I’, Hammerausstellung, Galerie Felix Handschin, Basel, 1978

Exhibition view of ‘Méta-Harmonie I’, Hammerausstellung, Galerie Felix Handschin, Basel, 1978

My contraptions do not make music; my contraptions use sounds and I play with those sounds; I sometimes build sound-mixing machines to mix sounds and then let the sounds go, give them their freedom.

Jean Tinguely

Méta

Tinguely made extensive use of the prefix ‘méta’ especially in the titles of his works and groups of works from the years 1954 to 1959.  He developed the term méta-mécanique in collaboration with the art critic Pontus Hultén. Later, however, he used the Greek prefix only in isolated cases. Attached to a noun, it denotes something on a higher level – a notion central to Hultén’s coinage, as the meta groups of works from Tinguely’s early period were all machines that reflected on how works of art come about, with the Méta-Matic drawing machines being an especially good example of this. As various statements by Tinguely show, he reinterpreted the term for his own purposes and by doing so slightly changed its meaning: ‘What happens is the correct, serious and functional use of chance. Hence the word meta. Hence the idea of mixing in chance – la production du hazard.’ It follows that, for him, meta defined the inexact and aleatoric. ‘Meta is of course the word that also means on top of, underneath etc., in other words not exact; it is the opposite of – we also say metascientific and metaphysical, in other words not clearly explicable, and so it is – Méta-Harmonie in fact means automatic, that is, an organised – possibly an organized disharmony.’ (Tinguely, 1988)

Sound

Jean Tinguely began building works that produce sounds early on in his career. Among them are his Reliefs méta-mécaniques sonores I and II, whose built-in wire, screws, and other metal objects strike various found materials such as bottles, preserving jars, a tin funnel, and a saw. ‘The noise is part of the machine that I try to make as integral to the design as its plastic form,’ Tinguely once remarked. Mes étoiles – Concert pour sept peintures, created in 1958, is a work consisting of seven reliefs that can be activated and made to produce sounds by turning the knobs on a control desk.

Tinguely repeatedly incorporated instruments into his sculptures. His Zyclograveur (1960), for example, features a drum and a cymbal, while his auto-destructive Homage to New York (1960) included a piano that was played via the action while the performance was in progress.

Also dating from the early 1960s, the Radio Sculptures are mechanical sculptures fitted with a motor that turns the tuning knob back and forth. The constant changes of frequency give rise to an aleatory, cacophonous, yet curiously melodious blanket of sound. Tinguely’s preoccupation with sound eventually culminated in the Méta-Harmonies, a series begun in the late 1970s.

Jean Tinguely during the installation of his exhibition at Städel, Frankfurt am Main, 1979, Photo: Leonardo Bezzola

Jean Tinguely during the installation of his exhibition at Städel, Frankfurt am Main, 1979, Photo: Leonardo Bezzola

Städel

That first edition of the work was later sold to the collectors Peter and Irene Ludwig, leaving Tinguely with no choice but to build a second Méta-Harmonie  for his 1979 exhibition at the Städel in Frankfurt am Main. His mobile sculpture Klamauk – consisting of a tractor surmounted by a mechanism fitted with countless percussion instruments – was also created for the show in Frankfurt. Its cymbals, cowbells, metal drums and fireworks conspired to give the viewer a percussive sound experience every time the tractor was driven.

A Méta-Harmonie for Japan

The 1980s saw the creation of three more Méta-Harmonies, including the Méta-Harmonie that Tinguely installed inside the monumental sculpture Le Cyclop. The second was Pandämonium No. 1 – Méta-Harmonie 3, a work commissioned by the Seibu chain of department stores in Tokyo. This machine, built in 1984, was not only more elaborate than its predecessors, but also rather morbid in character owing to the artist’s integration of animal skulls.

Méta-Harmonie IV

When Tinguely began using the disused factory premises of Von Roll AG, a former foundry in Olten, as a studio in the spring of 1985, he was delighted to find there numerous wooden wheels that had once served as die models and which he was able to build into his Fatamorgana – Méta-Harmonie IV.

 

The Méta-Harmonies highlight Tinguely’s preoccupation with sound as an artistic material.

Construction of ‘Utopia’ in Klus, 1987, Photo: Leonardo Bezzola

Construction of ‘Utopia’ in Klus, 1987, Photo: Leonardo Bezzola

Installation of ‘Utopia’ at Palazzo Grassi, Venedig, 1987, Photo: Leonardo Bezzola

Installation of ‘Utopia’ at Palazzo Grassi, Venedig, 1987, Photo: Leonardo Bezzola

Utopia

These are also the works with which he made the transition to the huge, room-filling mechanisms of his late period, a development that culminated in the Grosse Méta-Maxi-Maxi-Utopia of 1987. This walk-in work was created especially for Tinguely’s largest retrospective to date at the Palazzo Grassi in Venice, a show curated by Pontus Hultén that brought together a staggering ninety-four machine sculptures under one roof.

 

Utopia is 8 metres tall, 17 metres long, and a good 8 metres wide. It is assembled out of numerous wooden wheels in various sizes and colours, its heaviest element being the large red wooden wheel in the middle, which alone weighs come 600 kg. Josef Imhof, the artist’s erstwhile assistant, reported that Tinguely had initially planned to create a large relief, and to achieve the desired height had attached various steps and ladders that were to have been removed later on. In the course of his work, however, Tinguely decided to leave the steps going up and down and even installed additional platforms and stairs. Thus, the artist’s first and only walk-in machine sculpture was created.

 

When building Utopia, Tinguely had at his disposal the premises of a disused foundry, Von Roll AG near Olten, including a working gantry crane. The majority of the forty plus wheels that he discovered there are models that the foundry had used for making casts – almost all of them in the original colour – which Tinguely was allowed to use. As Utopia was built for an exhibition in Venice (1987), it features a number of elements relating to the city on the lagoon. Utopia was in fact the centrepiece of the Tinguely retrospective in Venice and hence was given pride of place in the courtyard of the palazzo.

Dance of Death
late works
of the 1980s

Jean Tinguely, ‘Mengele (High Altar)’, 1986, Museum Tinguely, Basel, Photo: Serge Hasenböhler

Bones and skulls

Jean Tinguely began working animal skulls into his art in 1981. His first machines to feature built-in bones and skulls went on show in an exhibition organised by the automotive group Renault in June 1981. Despite his assertion that the skulls lent emphasis to the burlesque element, they are also symbolic of his own growing preoccupation with death. This awareness of his own mortality is also evident in works like Inferno, which Eberhard Kornfeld exhibited at his gallery in Bern in late 1984. The skulls, like Tinguely’s ever more extensive use of consumer products and neon tubes, became a defining characteristic of his late works of the 1980s.

There is no death! Death exists only for those who cannot accept evolution. Everything changes. Death is transition from movement to movement.

Jean Tinguely

Jean Tinguely in the box of Formula 1 Team Würth, 1987

Jean Tinguely in the box of Formula 1 Team Würth, 1987

Formula 1

Tinguely’s long-cherished passion for Formula 1 car racing is also thematised in some of the key works of this period. His Fontaine Jo Siffert erected in Fribourg in the spring of 1984, for example, is a tribute to the racing driver, Jo Siffert, who died on the racetrack. Tinguely also installed a rotating sculpture made of components gleaned from two of Renault’s own Formula 1 racing cars into the Renault works in both Paris and Bern. Called Pit-Stop, this work is unique in Tinguely’s oeuvre in that it also incorporates the medium of film. It uses footage of a real-life pit-stop projected onto the walls of the exhibition space by a combination of 16-mm projectors and convex mirrors. In 1988 Tinguely combined racing car components and bones to build Lola T 180 ­– Mémorial pour Joakim B., a machine-cum-altar created in memory of his friend, the racing driver Joakim Bonnier, who was killed in 1972.

Jean Tinguely, ‘Pit-Stop’, 1984, Museum Tinguely, Basel, Photo: Christian Baur

Jean Tinguely, ‘Pit-Stop’, 1984, Museum Tinguely, Basel, Photo: Christian Baur

Jean Tinguely, ‘Lola T 180 − Mémorial pour Joakim B.’, 1988, Museum Tinguely, Basel, Photo: Christian Baur

Jean Tinguely, ‘Lola T 180 − Mémorial pour Joakim B.’, 1988, Museum Tinguely, Basel, Photo: Christian Baur

Mengele-Dance of Death

By mid-December 1985, Tinguely was so ill that he had to be admitted to Tiefenau hospital in Bern, where after undergoing heart surgery he spent several days in a coma. On the night of 26 August 1986, while still convalescing, he witnessed a huge fire at a farm in his home town of Neyruz. So fierce was the blaze that the farmhouse dating from 1801 was razed to the ground. All that was left were carbonised wooden beams, pieces of scorched iron, and agricultural machinery deformed almost beyond recognition. It was out of these relics, retrieved from the still glowing embers two days later, that Tinguely created a key work of his late period, the Mengele-Dance of Death. The first to show this ensemble comprising thirteen different machines was Ernst Beyeler, in January 1987. It also featured in the Tinguely retrospective in Venice in 1987, when it was installed in the church of San Samuele. The choice of a church as exhibition space underscored the sacral character of the piece, as did the fact that the ‘High altar’ of the Mengele-Dance of Death came to rest in the central apse, right in front of the high altar of San Samuele.

I am creating a game, a dance, a dance of death with this death. I am playing with it, trying to thumb my nose at it, to do mischief with it, in the style of joke articles, but as a living person even I, of course, am also condemned to die.

Jean Tinguely

Jean Tinguely’s ‘Safari de la mort moscovite’ on snow at the Red Square in Moscow, 1990, Photomontage: Leonardo Bezzola

Jean Tinguely’s ‘Safari de la mort moscovite’ on snow at the Red Square in Moscow, 1990, Photomontage: Leonardo Bezzola

‘Without death – no life!’

Tinguely’s health continued to deteriorate and in January 1989 he was once again admitted to hospital with heart problems. A solo show of his works opened in Moscow at the Central House of Artists in the spring of 1990 and it was for that exhibition that he created Le Safari de la Mort Moscovite, a mobile sculpture built onto a Renault 5 chassis and loaded with numerous skulls and a scythe. Tinguely’s mobile sculptures essentially took his kinetic art a stage further. Not only are they kinetic in themselves, but they can also move from one place to another. Josef, aka ‘Seppi’, Imhof, the artist’s assistant over many years, later recalled how one night he and Tinguely drove their work through the streets of Moscow, kindly escorted by the police.

 

The show ‘Jean Tinguely: Nachtschattengewächse’ at the Kunst Haus Vienna in July of the same year was the last exhibition to be installed by Tinguely himself. After a heart attack on 20 August 1991 Tinguely was again admitted to hospital in Bern, where he died ten days later. When he was laid to rest on 4th September, more than 10,000 people lined the streets of Fribourg to pay their last respects to him.