The proverb "necessity is the mother of invention" comes to mind with regard to Isamu Noguchi's involvement in industrial design beginning in the 1930s. Noguchi's efforts as a designer--he even started a business called Time Design offering a dizzying array of services--were motivated by many factors. His friend, "design scientist" R. Buckminster Fuller, brought an irresistible, missionary zeal to engineering and collaboration with American industry. Noguchi himself was prone to the technological utopianism so prevalent in the late twenties, when it seemed that architects and engineers, working with new materials in a fully mechanized society would be able to cure all the world's ills. When every American, including his early mentor, the educator Edward Rumely, who encouraged him to start Time Design and gave him a clock commission, wanted to be a man of business. Noguchi was also suffering from the limited range of opportunities available to artists during the depression--his proposals for public art being largely too complex and ahead of their time to gain traction from the likes of the Works Project Administration. Finally, in the way which has often been identified as distinctly American, he was fanatically, manically, constitutionally determined to be a Success. So, he channeled his energy into rethinking the design of everyday life.

This exhibition surveys the symbiotic relationship in Noguchi's work between sculpture and design in the years leading up to the 1939 World's Fair. Between 1932 and 1939 he designed cases for an interval clock and a baby monitor, proposed Bolt of Lightning, Memorial for Ben Franklin and Monument to the Plow, a 1,200 ft on a side, tilled and crop-rotated pyramid earthwork surmounted by an abstracted stainless steel plow, invented an internally lighted, musical weather vane, collaborated on several left-leaning architectural projects, designed a swimming pool (unbuilt) for a Richard Neutra house for a famous film director in Los Angeles, helped Fuller shape his Dymaxion Car, and finally created a monumental fountain for Ford Motor Company's World's Fair pavilion, celebrating an abstract assemblage of parts from the company's famous drivetrain. The 1939 World's Fair was the first organized around a theme, "Building the World of Tomorrow." No artist or designer better exemplified that spirit than Noguchi, who would ultimately hold every recognized intellectual property right available (including thirteen US patents) and was among the most versatile designers to walk the planet since the likes of Renaissance do-it-alls like Donatello, Michelangelo and Leonardo.

Patent Holder was developed in response to a borough-wide call to celebrate the 75th and 50th anniversaries of the two Queens World's Fairs of 1939-40 and 1964. The shape the show has taken owes an enormous amount to original research contained in Deborah A. Goldberg's unpublished dissertation Isamu Noguchi: The Artist as Engineer and Visionary Designer, 1918-1939 (Institute of Fine Arts, NYU, 2000).

The Noguchi Museum

9-01 33rd Road at Vernon Boulevard
Long Island City (NY) 11106 United States
Tel. +1 (718) 2047088
info@noguchi.org
www.noguchi.org

Opening hours

Wednesday, Thursday, Friday from 10am to 5pm
Saturday & Sunday from 11am to 6pm

Related images
  1. Isamu Noguchi, Swimming Pool for Josef von Sternberg, c. 1978, Bronze 6 1/2 x 15 x 14 1/2 inches. Photo by Kevin Noble
  2. Isamu Noguchi, Musical Weathervane, 1933, Plastic, electrical components. Photographer unknown
  3. Isamu Noguchi, Study for Monument to the Plow, 1933, Charcoal [?] on paper
  4. Isamu Noguchi, Radio Nurse, 1937, Bakelite, 8 1/4 x 6 3/4 x 6 1/4 in. Photo by Kevin Noble
  5. Isamu Noguchi, 1000 Horsepower Heart, c. 1938, Plaster, paint. Photo by F.S. Lincoln
  6. Isamu Noguchi, Monument to Ben Franklin, 1933, Chrome, nickel-plated bronze, aluminum, 48 1/2 x 23 1/4 x 12 3/4 in. Photo by Kevin Noble