blackbirdonline journalSpring 2023  Vol. 21  No.3
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back ARTIFICIAL BODIES

A Miscellany

Your are my creator, but I am your master; Obey!
(the monster to Victor Frankenstein)
      —Mary Shelley,
Frankenstein (1918)

HELENA
Radius! Doctor Gall gave you a better brain than the rest, better than ours. You are the only one of the Robots that understands perfectly. That’s why I had you put into the library, so that you could read everything, understand everything, and then, oh, Radius—I wanted you to show the whole world that the Robots are our equals. That’s what I wanted of you.

RADIUS I don’t want a master. I want to be master over others.
      —Karel Čapek,
R.U.R (1920)

The liberating word spread throughout the world that man should, on his upward path, come closer to and resemble the Machines, which, due to the universally brilliant progress of technology and science, are the most perfect of all human creation and invention.
      —Josef Čapek
, Artificial Man (1924)


 
Triptych of images from Claudia Emerson’s Study
 Diabolus Artificialosus.
 The Book of Warfare Devices
 Johannes de Fontana
 circa 1420

 
from Claudia Emerson’s Study (detail)
 Feuerhexe
 The Book of Warfare Devices
 Johannes de Fontana
 circa 1420

 

 
Claudia Emerson and Kent Ippolito
 “On an Apple being lifted, Hercules shoots a Dragon which then hisses,”
 The Pneumatics of Hero of Alexandria
from the original Greek, translated for and
 edited by Bennet Woodcroft, Professor of Machinery in University College London.
 (London: Taylor Walton and Maberly, 1851).


 In the original text, there were no figures. The image here or in any edition is a
 visulization based on the described constructions.
 

 

 
Claudia Emerson and Kent Ippolito
 “On an Apple being lifted, Hercules shoots a Dragon which then hisses.”
 

 

 
Claudia Emerson and Kent Ippolito
 Automaton in the Form of a Triumphal Chariot Drawn by Four Horses.
 circa 1760–70
 Metropolitan Museum of Art

 
Claudia Emerson and Kent Ippolito
 Automaton in the Form of a Triumphal Chariot Drawn by Four Horses (detail)
 circa 1760–70
 Metropolitan Museum of Art

 
 The “Draughtsman-Writer” automaton by Henri Maillardet
 Henri Maillardet, London, c. 1800
 Franklin Institute

 

 
 The automotan is capable of producing written text and drawing.

 The “Draughtsman-Writer” automaton by Henri Maillardet
 Henri Maillardet, London, c. 1800
 Franklin Institute

 
 Poem in English produced by Maillardet’s automotan.

 The “Draughtsman-Writer” automaton by Henri Maillardet
 Henri Maillardet, London, c. 1800
 Franklin Institute

 
 Drawing of a ship produced by Maillardet’s automotan.

 The “Draughtsman-Writer” automaton by Henri Maillardet
 Henri Maillardet, London, c. 1800
 Franklin Institute

 
 The Draughtsman, the Musician, and the Scribe
 Jaquet-Droz automata
 Musée d'Art et d'Histoire de Neuchâtel

 
 Jacquemart de la Collégiale Saint Pierre à Louvain.

 
 Edison Phonograph doll, 1890.
 National Museum of Scotland

 The phonograph mechanism from the body is displayed alongside.

 
 Model of a robot based on drawings by Leonardo da Vinci. 

 
 First edition of The Wizard of Oz title page.
 
1900

 

 
 Cover showing an image from the first film version of Frankenstein
 The Edison Kinetogram
 
1910

 

 
 His Majesty, the Scarecrow of Oz
 Directed by J. Farrel MacDonald
 1914

 

RABBI:
Your own desire is nothing.
For all your roads, your days and nights have been
Decreed for you, decreed for all your deeds.
You are created for more than mere life,
To work great wonders here in hush and hiding
To do your deeds in secrecy and silence.
No one shall know about your furtive strength,
You'll be a water carrier, a wood chopper.

PHANTOM:
A golem

RABBI:
A nation’s messenger, a man of might.

PHANTOM:
A servant to be ordered, to be ruled.

 

 דער גולםDer Goylem, The Golem by H. Leivick, 1920
 (set in Prague in the seventeenth century).
 Translation from Yiddish by Joachim Neugroschel, 2006.


 

 
 Aharon Meskin as the golem in H.  Leivik’s The Golem.
 1927

 

 
 Karel Váňya, second robot, R.U.R., Prague
 1921

 

 
 Drawing of Karel Čapek as an R.U.R. robot
 Josef Čapek
 1921

 

 
 R.U.R.
 Garrick Theatre
 1922


 R.U.R.’s robots are organic, though assembed. A plot point in the first act is that Helena Glory
 cannot recognize that Dr. Alquist’s secretary is a robot. Over the next decade, however, robots
 are differentiated visually, becoming more mechanical in appearance. Even the following article
 on a performance at the Garrick Theatre describes the robots as “mechanical.”

 

 
 

 

 
 Act 2, R.U.R., St. Martin’s Theatre, London.
 The robot Radius (Leslie Banks) and  Helena Glory (Frances Carson)
 1923
 

 

 
 The Wizard of Oz with Larry Semon, Dorothy Dwan, and Oliver Hardy, 
 Chadwick Pictures - The Film Daily (July—Dec. 1924)

 

 
Homo postbellicosus, the War Man
 Throughout the world, in various exemplars, Homo postbellicosus, the War Man,
 is present today! . . . Its flesh is transformed into mathematical cavities, its
 ones into iron and wood, its joints into levers, screws, and flexible springs,
 its skin into bandages, rubber, and beef hide. It is almost entirely artificial,
 consisting almost entirely of prosthetics, and the goal is nearly achieved!
      —Josef Čapek, Artificial Man
        
 1924

 

m
 
 San Antonio Light
 
December 25, 1926

 

 
 Still from Metropolis
 Directed by Fritz Lang
 1927

 

 
Photo of Gakutensoku, built in 1928 by Japanese biologist, Makoto Nishimura
 Photo of Gakutensoku built by Japanese biologist Makoto Nishimura (left).
 Gakutensoku was described as a robot that could move its arms and change facial
 expression.
 1928

 

 
 Eric, the talking robot.
 (The letters R.U.R appear on this assembly as an apparent homage to Karel Čapek.)
 1929

 

 
 Eric, the talking robot.
 1929

 

 
 Still from Loss of Sensation, a 1935 Soviet science fiction sound film.
 Directed by Alexandr Andriyevsky.
 Despite “R.U.R” appearing on the robots, the film is not based on Karel Čapek’s play but
 on the 1929 Ukrainian novel Iron Riot by Volodimir Vladko.
 
 Still from Loss of Sensation
 Directed by Alexandr Andriyevsky.
 1935

 

 
 Iron Riot by Volodimir Vladko
 1929

 

 
 BBC Production of R.U.R.
 1938


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