Tag: MOMA

  • Marcel Duchamp’s Rotary Demisphere (Precision Optics) at MOMA

    a hypnotic spinning half-globe surrounded by copper, on a 3 ft pedestal, connected by pulley to a geared down electric motor

    This is one of the odder works of art at MOMA that Y and I saw a few weeks back. It’s Marcel Duchamp‘s Rotary Demisphere (Precision Optics) from 1925. The spinning lines on the half-globe under the plexiglass dome creates a pulsing effect optical illusion when it is turned on. Perhaps to preserve the original motor at its base, it is operated via a geared down electric motor off to the side of its base. It’s only turned on twice a day for five minutes each time–at 11:00am and 3:30pm. It’s an interesting assemblage of electrical and mechanical technologies to create the whole work of art.

    top view of a hypnotic spinning half-globe surrounded by copper, on a 3 ft pedestal, connected by pulley to a geared down electric motor
    rear view of a hypnotic spinning half-globe surrounded by copper, on a 3 ft pedestal, connected by pulley to a geared down electric motor
  • Introduction to Piet Mondrian’s Neoplasticism Through Star Trek: The Next Generation

    Piet Mondrian's "Tableau I" hands on a wall between Lt. Cmd. Data standing and his daughter Lal sitting.

    In “The Offspring,” the 16th episode of the third season of Star Trek: The Next Generation, we get to see Piet Mondrian’s “Tableau I” hanging on the wall of his quarters when he shows it to his daughter Lal. I think this might be the first time that I had really seen or had my attention drawn to a work by Mondrian. I thought it was quite striking as a work of art, and it seemed fitting that Data might be drawn to this work for its ordered lines despite Mondrian’s neoplasticism theory and its connection to nature and emotion as being the motivators for the artist’s composition.

    Lt. Cmd. Data seated next to Timothy. Mondrian's "Tableau I" is in the background.

    Mondrian’s “Tableau I” appears in Lt. Cmd. Data’s quarters–notably in the eleventh episode of season five titled “Hero Worship,” in which Timothy, a young boy traumatized by the loss of his parents, apes Data’s mannerisms in order to erase his emotional response to his loss. In one scene, Data and Timothy paint in Data’s quarters where “Tableau I” is on an easel to the side.

    Screenshot from the Star Trek: The Next Generation Interactive Technical Manual of Lt. Cmd. Data's quarters where Mondrian's "Tableau I" is seen on an easel.

    In the Star Trek: The Next Generation Interactive Technical Manual, Mondrian’s “Tableau I” is on an easel in about the same place as pictured in “Hero Worship.”

    Yesterday, I was able to see some of Mondrian’s works in person at the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in Manhattan. Y and I went there to see our friends from Japan, Masaya and Saki. While I didn’t get to see “Tableau I,” because it hangs in the Kunstmuseum in The Hague, I did get to see some representative works of his neoplasticism.

    Painting of lines and colored rectangles by Piet Mondrian at MOMA.
    Painting of lines and colored rectangles by Piet Mondrian at MOMA.
    Painting of lines and colored rectangles by Piet Mondrian at MOMA.
    Painting of lines and colored rectangles by Piet Mondrian at MOMA.
    Painting of lines and colored rectangles by Piet Mondrian at MOMA.