Sunday, October 5, 2003

Le Défenseur du Temps

Le Défenseur du Temps, The Defender of Time by Jacques Monestier, Quartier de l'Horloge, 3rd arrondissement, Paris

“Le Défenseur du Temps” (The Defender of Time) by Jacques Monestier, 1979
Passage des Ménétriers
Rue Brantôme
Quartier de l'Horloge, 3rd arrondissement
Paris, July 2002

Le Défenseur du Temps is a clock made of automata. Close to the dial, a man perched on a rock with a sword and shield fights against a bird, a dragon, and a crab which respectively represent air, earth, and water. As originally designed, every hour from 9 am to 10 pm, he fights one of the three animals chosen randomly by a program. At noon, 6 pm, and 10pm, all three animals attack at the same time. The time is announced by three strokes. While the man fights, he is accompanied by sounds of breaking waves, rumbling earth or the sound of wind, depending on the animal chosen. Le Défenseur du temps is 4 meters high and weighs about 1 ton. The characters, animals and the clock face are hammered brass and gold leaf. The rock on which they sit is composed of oxidized brass. In its original configuration, a master electronic quartz circuit board controlled the random attacks chance, and used six cam timers and five tape recorders.” (Le Défenseur du Temps, Wikipedia)

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