In a six-month residency programme at Godrej’s Mumbai office in Vikhroli, the artist was recently tasked with paying homage to the final set of Godrej & Boyce typewriters. The company was the last to stop producing typewriters in 2011 with about 100 Prima machines left in its stock.
The mild-mannered Mayer typically works alone. Here, with two young artists to help him out, he was able to take up an ambitious 13-foot sculpture. They began in March and finished in August, spending some nights sleeping in the studio. The results were a mechanised lotus, a design driven by aesthetics and not politics, as Mayer points out, and several mandalas or circles symbolising the universe.
He has not stopped since. Mayer’s works over the years could easily be mistaken for robots or elements from a science fiction movie. For a human figure, he always begins building the spine and pelvis first. In Mayer’s universe, the typewriter lever that helps with spacing mimics bones of the hands and feet, typebars become shoulder blades and ribbon spools form the trachea. He loves springs because they give the illusion of movement even if the piece is inactive. While the sculpture he created for Godrej moves, Mayer’s other works are typically motionless.
But he does not use welding, or soldering to hold together a piece. These leave obvious signs, according to him. Mayer relies instead on building the sculpture like a Meccano set, and the constraints of this process “create surprises” for him. He also chose not to get professional art training, preferring to learn from experience and aesthetic mistakes.
People now send him vintage typewriters from thrift stores, yard sales or their own collections. Assemblage sculpting is a way to give the typewriter longevity, he reckons. “You have to navigate the past and the future and appreciate both. That way, it does not remain a cold dead machine.”
The typewriter sculpture is installed at Godrej Hubble, Vikhroli. One can view it by making a prior appointment with Godrej Archive.
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