Established | 2006 |
---|---|
Type | Private |
Founder | Neil Barden Salley |
Website | www |
Musée Patamécanique is a private museum located in the Historical District of Bristol, Rhode Island. Founded in 2006 by Neil Barden Salley, it is open by appointment only to friends, colleagues, and occasionally to outside observers.[1] Presented as a hybrid of an automaton theater and a cabinet of curiosities, it contains works representing the field of Patamechanics, an artistic practice and area of study chiefly inspired by Pataphysics.[2]
History
Musée Patamécanique was founded by creative artist, inventor and filmmaker Neil Barden Salley in 2006. During his time at the Rhode Island School of Design earning his Master's Degree, Salley began to create performances and mechanical sculptures that eventually became prototypes he used at the museum.[3] The museum originally opened as an exhibition in a barn behind Linden Place, a historic house museum designed by Russell Warren in 1810. In 2009, the exhibit closed to make way for a ground-up restoration of the barn that later became occupied by the Bristol Art Museum. Work on an expanded Musée Patamécanique began in 2009[4] with work being completed in 2013. The museum reopened for tours on April 1, 2014, under the curatorial direction of Daren Elsa NiBelly.
Musée Patamécanique translates from the French to "The museum of Patamechanics." The term Patamechanics was coined by Salley during his time at the Rhode Island School of Design and is derived from the term Pataphysics.[2] According to its website, the term Patamechanics is "... primarily concerned with the behavior of physical bodies when subjected to conscious ’Pataphysical forces or displacements and the subsequent effects of these bodies on their environment."[5]
Exhibits
Much of the material in Musée Patamécanique has clear ties to Dada and Theater of the Absurd. It also references postmodern literature, novelty architecture, theories of memory, identity, automata and mimesis, perception, and Pataphysics.[6] The new version of the museum encompasses tours of both outdoor and indoor exhibition environments, all within a six-block area in the center of downtown Bristol. The exhibition begins with a walking tour in the form of a soundwalk that begins at sunset,[6] which leads patrons to the indoor exhibit's "secret" location: a building named Patamechanics Hall, built by Salley and an example of novelty architecture.[3]
Musée Patamécanique includes artistic, pseudoscientific, pre-cinematic and unclassified exhibits, many of which are displayed in Patamechanics Hall, a walk-in cabinet of curiosity.[3] Examples include a troop of singing animatronic chipmunks (a collaboration with Salley’s father); a "time machine",[6] which the museum claims to be the world’s largest automated phenakistascope; an olfactory clock; a chandelier of singing animatronic nightingales; an Undigestulator (a device that purportedly reconstitutes digested foods); The Earolin, a 24-inch tall holographic ear that plays the violin; and a machine for capturing the dreams of bumblebees.[6][7]
Critical reception
Reception for the initial production of Musée Patamécanique was generally positive. The Boston Globe’s Greg Cook described it as “ … an intellectual hall of mirrors. It is a museum for questioning museums, and art, and science, and officialdom, and facts, and the world.”[3] Gwendolyn Holbrow of Art New England called it “A genuine gesamtkunst- werk [masterpiece of art], the Musee stimulates the five traditional senses plus several more: the sense of proprioception, the sense of wonder, and the sense of fun.”[8]
See also
References
- ↑ Rodriguez, Bill (18 May 2007). "Somewhere in time". The Providence Phoenix. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
- 1 2 Brown, Seth (2007). Rhode Island Curiosities: Quirky Characters, Roadside Oddities and Other Offbeat Stuff. Globe Pequot. ISBN 9780762743384.
- 1 2 3 4 Cook, Greg (12 August 2007). "Next Stop Wonderland - Part Mad Hatter, Part Wizard of Oz, an Artist Welcomes Visitors Into His World of Fanciful Contraptions". The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on 28 March 2015. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
- ↑ Cookland, Greg (19 December 2010). "Construction continues at Musee Patamecanique". The New England Journal of Aesthetic Research. Archived from the original on 14 August 2014. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
- ↑ "Definition - Patamechanics". Musee Patamecanique official website. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 Nash, Matthew. "Le Musee Patamecanique". Big Red and Shiny. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
- ↑ Feeney, Mark (20 April 2007). "The wonder years". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
- ↑ Holbrow, Gwendolyn. "New Movements in Kinetic Sculpture" (PDF). Art New England. Retrieved 29 June 2014.