← A. Inventions, No. 33
August Barlow (1836–1901)
Musikalischer Wunderschrank
1890
Barlow & Moore, Cabinetmakers, est. 1872, Boston, Massachusetts. Varnished walnut case, green baize, oak keybed with horn and resin keytops, printed paper, polished brass hardware. 28¼ × 38⅛ × 11⅝". Collection of the author.
By the thirteenth century, the best itinerant jongleurs in medieval Europe were expected to play a number of musical instruments, sometimes many of them at once. Their bindle of horns and tambourines gradually grew into a portable orchestra, which by the sixteenth century had become codified as the Musikalischer Wunderschrank, or ‘cabinet of musical wonders.’ It typically included tuned instruments like the sackbut and crumhorn, alongside a seemingly endless collection of percussive rattles, blocks, and claves.
In the early nineteenth century, antiquity became a central theme in Romantic literature, and attention turned once again to the Musikalischer Wunderschrank. But this time, it was revisited by the more scientifically-inclined minds of the Enlightenment. The Musick-Cabinet, as English and American manufacturers called it, reemerged not merely as a suitcase for the traveling musician, or a vitrine for the gentleman collector, but as a single integrated instrument. Driven by a keyboard, and capable of producing many timbres, it was a veritable portable pipe organ, or an early mechanical synthesizer. These instruments by Barlow & Moore of Boston expose a sophisticated viscera of sound-making devices, only some of them recognizable, and few of them actually connected with the functioning acoustical apparatus.
Published January 9, 2023. Copyright © 2023 Jonathan Hoefler.
About
The objects in the Apocryphal Inventions series are technical chimeras, intentional misdirections coaxed from the generative AI platform Midjourney. Instead of iterating on the system’s early drafts to create ever more accurate renderings of real-world objects, creator Jonathan Hoefler subverted the system to refine and intensify its most intriguing misunderstandings, pushing the software to create beguiling, aestheticized nonsense. Some images have been retouched to make them more plausible; others have been left intact, appearing exactly as generated by the software. The accompanying descriptions, written by the author, offer fictitious backstories rooted in historical fact, which suggest how each of these inventions might have come to be.
These images represent some of AI’s most intriguing answers to confounding questions, an inversion of the more pressing debate in which it is humanity that must confront the difficult and existential questions posed by artificial intelligence.
Previously:
No. 32. Proprietary Kitchen Devices
Next:
No. 34. Taxiscope