Industrious Little Creatures, Chock-Full of Gears and Wonder
When we say that today’s rapidly changing technology is set to transform
the way we live in unimaginable ways, we should remember that people
thought much the same thing in earlier centuries - whether in the time of
the clockwork revolution in the eighteenth century or as a result of the
scientific advances of the Industrial Revolution in the Victorian era.
Here are a few examples of fascinating early robots, "one-armed
bandits", "steam men", and automatons:
(left: L’Oiseleur (The Bird Trainer),
the most expensive automaton doll - 6.25 million US dollars,
Leonardo da Vinci is
renowned for his inventions that were often centuries ahead of their time,
so it’s not surprising to learn that he was also active in developing
automatons. Leonardo’s ‘robot’ was designed around 1495 and the notes were
rediscovered in a sketchbook in the 1950’s. We have no idea if Leonardo
actually tried to build the device, but a version was built based on his
designs and did actually work, being capable of reproducing several humanoid
movements.
In England,
the famous astrologer and mathematician John Dee designed a wooden beetle in 1543 that could actually fly:
Noble Studios produced a modern steampunk
version of a mechanical beetle:
"The industrious mechanical beetle scurried to and fro in the
garden, hoping to hide her vulnerability under the hard shell of
indifference."
From Germany,
this small wooden puppet depicting a monk also dates from the mid sixteenth
century and has a lever and a mechanism for the figure’s joints (below
left). On the right is the Italian female lute player automaton, which
dates from the same period:
As watch making developed in the Age of Enlightenment in the eighteenth
century, so did the art of creating mechanical people and animals. Jacques
Vaucason created numerous working figures, including a flute player, which
actually played the instrument, in 1738, plus this duckfrom 1739. The gilded
copper bird could sit, stand, splash around in water, quack and even give
the impression of eating food and digesting it:
Later in the eighteenth century, Pierre Jaquet-Doz created three automata, The Writer, The Draughtsman and
The Musician, which are still considered scientific marvels today. The
Draughtsman is capable of producing four distinct pictures, while the
Writer dips his pen in the ink and can write as many as forty letters. The
Musician’s fingers actually play the organ and the figure ends her
performance with a bow.
Henri Maillardet’s Automaton, which illustrates and writes several
verses in both French and English (watch a video),
was built in 1805. Over a century later, in 1928, it was acquired by Philadelphia’s
Franklin Institute, although at the time, the object’s history was
uncertain. However, once the automaton had been repaired and operated again
for the first time in many decades, it wrote the words ‘written by the
automaton of Maillardet’, thus solving the mystery.
The Joueuse de Tympanon was built in 1772 (watch and presented to Marie
Antoinette, Queen of France, then later restored by Robert Houdin in 1864.
Houdin was renowned as an inventor, clockmaker and even as a magician,
creating many mechanical marvels of his own. Some figures often simply
mimicked the actions in time with a musical box inside the machine, but
this automaton really plays the instrument.
The Turk was invented
in 1770 by Wolfgang von Kempelen and was an apparent chess master,
defeating such illustrious opponents as Benjamin Franklin and Napoleon
Bonaparte. The mechanical hand moved the game pieces and the device’s
cabinet doors could be opened to show a variety of complicated gears and
other machinery. However, the mechanical marvel was later revealed to be an
elaborate hoax, with a person hidden inside the box directing the chess
moves. There was even a sliding seat that allowed the operator to stay
hidden when the doors were opened for people to examine the fake machinery
Other hoaxes existed - for example, this automaton called Nancy from the late 1800’s was operated
from beneath the stage by a hand crank
This rather curious example dates from the 1790’s and once belonged to Tipu
Sultan, ruler of Mysore and a fierce opponent of the expansion of British
rule in India. The wooden automaton, containing a miniature organ, shows a
tiger, which apparently actually growls, attacking a European soldier:
An intricate baroque automaton from German (Augsburg), ca. 1620, Diana and the Stag can be found in the Metropolitan
Museum of Art:
"The stag has a hollow body and a removable head and can be used as a
drinking cup. When used in drinking games, a mechanism in the base was
wound up and the automaton was allowed to run freely on concealed
wheels..."
Euphonia, a machine that could mimic a human voice, was developed by
Joseph Faber in the middle years of the nineteenth century. Using German
accented English, it could read the alphabet, sing, whisper, laugh and even
utter the words “How do you do, ladies and gentlemen”. Apparently anyone
who inspected the Euphonia’s mechanical workings was convinced that no
trickery was involved, such as Faber employing a ventriloquist:
This remarkable steam-powered, life-sized man, using a gas boiler, was
built in 1893 by Canadian George Moore
and had a walking speed of around nine mph:
Another walking "Electric
Man" was introduced
in Strand Magazine of
London by inventor Louis
Philip Perew - and was demonstrated in 1900
"It walked smoothly, and almost noiselessly... It was controlled by
means of an electric battery. The walk was rapid, and at the end of the
journey around the hall the step was as resilient as at the beginning. The
inventor of the machine-man said it could keep up that pace for an almost
unlimited time. But the figure, on this question, spoke for itself. "I
am going to walk from New York
to San Fransisco," it said, in a deep clear voice... Within the bosom
of the automation is concealed a talking machine. Perew's man may be taught
to say anything."
(top
& left images: Frank
Reade's Steam Man; right image: 1868 "Steam Man" by Dederick
From the pages of Science
and Invention, 1924, comes this Radio
Police Automaton:
Big Wins at Casino Games "Facilitated" by Vintage Automatons
Unless you go to big online hubs like William Hill, you may be enticed to be
"helped" in your luck by one of these mechanical figures... Even
today some people believe in extra fortune attached to these classic
vintage "One-Armed Bandits", which like a mascot, or a good-luck
charm would augment your winning (or spending) casino reality with some clicking
gears and quaint robot-like movements...
These original American "One-Armed Bandits" were life-size cowboy
figures, with working jackpot slot machines build-in
Similarly playing on casino slot machine esthetics, but entirely different
in its purpose, is "A Machine for Computing the Names of 13,500
Ventriloquists Dummies", made by Paul Spooner. He explains: "...I made a thing I called an ideas machine. It
was like a one-armed bandit except that one arm was missing and it
displayed words instead of fruit... On the first two drums were adjectives,
on the third, nouns; 36 words on each drum, so it could produce 46,656
different combinations."
Automatons Have Rights!
...according to artist Kandace Commons (spokesperson for Society of the
Promotion of Construct Rights), and they are ready to stand up for it, too!
More modern automaton-android design seem to be particularly enigmatic with
its highly-reflective and unemotional face:
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Good article; can oyu share some information sources? I am working on an educational Project and need it for references...
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