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The Tinguely Fountain in front of the Tinguely Museum in Basel Smaller Tinguely, behind glass; The Sorceress of 1961; welded, painted, chromed, galvanized & rusted iron & steel with aluminum, glazed ceramic, copper, hemp, cotton twine, galvanized wire, springs, electrical wire and rubber, with electric motor; at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Jean Tinguely (22 May 1925 in Fribourg, Switzerland – 30 August 1991 in Bern) was a Swiss painter and sculptor. He is best known for his sculptural machines or kinetic art, in the Dada tradition; known officially as metamechanics. Tinguely's art satirized the mindless overproduction of material goods in advanced industrial society. Tinguely grew up in Basel, but moved to France as a young adult to pursue a career in art. He belonged to the Parisian avantgarde in the mid-twentieth century and was one of the artists who signed the New Realist's manifesto (Nouveau réalisme) in 1960. His best-known work, a self-destroying sculpture titled Homage to New York (1960), only partially self-destructed at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, although his later work, Study for an End of the World No. 2 (1962), detonated successfully in front of an audience gathered in the desert outside Las Vegas. In Arthur Penn's Mickey One (1965) the mime-like Artist (Kamatari Fujiwara) with his self-destructive machine is an obvious Tinguely tribute. In 1971, Tinguely married Niki de Saint Phalle.
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