A New York salute to Rube Goldberg and his outlandish contraptions

Arts

A postage stamp (date unknown) celebrating Rube Goldberg's cartoons © Rube Goldberg Inc.

When Queens Museum curators learned that a travelling Rube Goldberg exhibition was in the works in the US, they quickly resolved to host it. What better place than a museum that celebrates New York, where Goldberg came to fame as a cartoonist drawing zany, deliberately overengineered contraptions? they reasoned. “We felt it would be too painful not to bring the show here, says the curator Larissa Harris.

The exhibition, The Art of Rube Goldberg, traces Goldberg (1883-1970)s trajectory from his turn-of-the-century drawings, including the first glimmerings of his comic style, on through his years as an extremely popular syndicated cartoonist sketching outlandish inventions from the late 1920s to the 1940s. Political cartoons from the 1930s, 40s and 50s ridiculing targets like Stalin and political corruption help round out the picture.

Also examined is the influence that vaudeville had on Goldbergs frenetic work, and how he in turn influenced Hollywood through collaborations on sets and scripts with Charlie Chaplin and The Three Stooges. Videos, family photographs and ephemera from advertisements he drew for companies like Pepsi, Pennzoil and Lucky Strike in later years complete the portrait.

But front and center are those invention cartoons, which gave rise in the US to the label “Rube Goldberg” to describe any gadget accomplishing simple tasks in absurdly convoluted ways. According to Harris, part of the artists aesthetic was rooted in patent drawings minutely labelling the components of inventions from A to Z.

Galvanised by the show, the Queens Museum has commissioned its own special exhibit, an interactive machine inspired by Goldbergs cartoons. “People think that Rube Goldberg designed machines—he did not, he made drawings,” Harris says, although the artist did earn an engineering degree before embarking on his cartooning career. “It was us thinking that they [the machines] would be impossible in reality.”

A multimedia Rube Goldbergian apparatus that the Queens Museum commissioned from Partner & Partners along with the designers Greg Mihalko, Stephan von Muehlen and Ben Cohen. Hai Zhang/Courtesy of the Queens Museum

The curators put that assumption to the test, turning to the design practice Partner & Partners along with the designers Greg Mihalko, Stephan von Muehlen and Ben Cohen. What resulted is a multimedia creation titled A Machine for Introducing an Exhibition that blends video animations with actual mechanical chain reactions.

First the user presses a big green button. An animated bird flies on a flat screen, which then triggers a real electric fan that blows on a pinwheel Read More – Source