Kendall Band
Kendall Band | |
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MBTA |
The Kendall Band is a three-part musical sculpture created between 1986 and 1988 by
The three parts of the interactive work are called Pythagoras, Kepler, and Galileo, and are all controlled by levers located on the subway platforms.[5]
Sculpture
The Kendall Band is an interactive sound sculpture located in
The ensemble was created by Paul Matisse, who is the grandson of Henri Matisse and stepson of Marcel Duchamp.[2] Matisse won the commission in 1981 to create a sculpture for Kendall Station,[7] as part of an effort to beautify the Red Line and its stations. This effort was known as the "Arts on the Line" program,[5] and was "the first program in the nation to put works of art in public transportation systems."[8] The work was not installed until 1987 due to station reconstruction.[7]
Due to fears of the art work being vandalized, Matisse decided to place the sculpture between the inbound and outbound tracks of the station before even deciding on what to create. He said "It had a
Pythagoras
The Pythagoras section of the Kendall Band is named for the
There are actually two identical, completely separate and independent musical instruments comprising Pythagoras. One can be operated from a handle located on the inbound subway platform, and the other can be played simultaneously from a handle on the outbound side. The hammers are not directly coupled to the handles, to prevent them from striking the chimes too violently. Instead, the handles must be rhythmically moved back and forth at an appropriate frequency, depending on the physical phenomenon of mechanical resonance to build up enough energy to strike the chimes. Which chimes are sounded when depends in a complex manner on the recent history of handle movement. Although the detailed mathematical analysis of motions is quite complex, most visitors quickly and intuitively figure out how to operate the sculpture without any written instructions.
Kepler

The Kepler section is named for
Galileo
The Galileo instrument is a large metal sheet the size of a barn door,
Installation and repairs
Paul Matisse was the only artist commissioned for the initial "Arts on the Line" program who created an artwork with moving parts. Almost immediately after the Kendall Band was installed, it broke. The sculpture began to fail so quickly that the Pythagoras instrument stopped working before the other two could even be completely installed. Matisse later commented that, "You’d probably have to say it was folly of me to press ahead and present them with something that had moving parts...(but)...I figured it was going to be all right."[5]
Although Matisse's contract specified that the MBTA would pay for repairs, the agency did not pay him and he did repairs for free.[10] Matisse would post temporary signs in place of the instrument handles on the walls of the station whenever repair work was taking place on the Kendall Band. Responses which were scrawled in the margins by passengers ranged from "If you spent my tax $ on this, then may you DIE SLOWLY!!" to “If you spent tax dollars on this, may you live long + happily."[5] Other comments included “Great to do while stoned!", “Thank you for making me forget the horrors of this day", and “Try to get a tapered connection from the first vertical to the second on this side and an oversized second vertical linkage with perhaps an internal shock absorber".[5]
Over time, repairs and additions to the sculpture were completed that made the work more resilient. One of the more-important modifications added a set of mechanical clutches hidden behind the handles of the instruments, which disengage "when someone yanks too hard or too fast".[5][11]
No repair or upgrade work could be performed until 1:30am each night, which is when the MBTA stops running trains.[7][12] Matisse himself had to personally repair the sculpture whenever it broke, and he was not able to find any organization or corporation that was willing to take over the upkeep of the Band. Because of this, Matisse eventually abandoned the work after roughly 20 years of maintenance. He later stated, “I just kept it going, and then at one point I decided that I was just going to have to let it go out on its own... Sort of like one’s kids. The time comes."[5]
Decline into disrepair
A one-time $10,000 fix was paid for by the MBTA in 2007, but the transit agency then stated that it could not fund any future repairs. All further repairs made to the sculpture had to be carried out and paid for by Matisse out of his own pocket. In 2007, when the now 74-year-old Paul Matisse stopped patching up the Kendall Band, the sculpture quickly fell into disrepair. Out of the original six handles, four had been removed, and only Galileo was in a working state.[8]
The only original engineering drawings for the Kendall Band were also lost in a hard-drive crash during this period, requiring documentation to be reconstructed from disassembly and direct measurement of components.[8][13]
Kendall Band Preservation Society
Over the years, the nearby Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has expanded into Kendall Square, as principal sponsor and collaborator in the burgeoning high-tech innovation district. In 2010, a group of MIT students were brought together to repair and conserve the Kendall Band. The idea for the group came from Seth G. Parker, a principal at a Massachusetts based energy consulting firm. He got in touch with the head of the Concerts Office in Music and Theater Arts at MIT, Clarise E. Snyder. She in turn contacted Paul Matisse and the MIT Department of Materials Science and Engineering, who recommended that instructor Michael J. Tarkanian be supervisor of the project to repair the sculpture.[14]
About 20 students were gathered to work on the cataloging and repair of the instruments, with seven of them chosen to actually dismantle the work.[14] The students dubbed themselves "The Kendall Band Preservation Society".[5]
In April 2010, the Kendall Band Preservation Society started dismantling the Kendall Band.
As of May 2011[update], Pythagoras was restored to operation from the inbound platform, while work continued on the other two instruments.[15][16][17]
Since then, the sculptures have again fallen into disrepair, and were being restored to operation as of February 2018[update].[13] Tarkanian has handed over responsibility for maintenance to Steve Drasco, a physics instructor in the MIT Concourse educational group.[13] As of November 2024[update], only the Pythagoras tubular chimes operated from the outbound platform were connected and functional.
References
- ^ a b c d e "Kendall Band". Paul Matisse. Retrieved July 7, 2023.
- ^ a b c d e Christopher Reed. "Pure Fabrication" Archived 2008-12-03 at the Wayback Machine. Harvard Magazine. May–June 2002. Accessed May 26, 2010.
- MBTA. 2007. Accessed May 26, 2010
- ^ Daly, Gabriel J. and Velan, Sonam S. "T-Riders Ring the Sound of Science". The Harvard Crimson. December 07, 2006 . Accessed May 27, 2010.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Grace notes from the underground". The Boston Globe. May 9, 2010. Accessed May 26, 2010.
- ^ a b "Arts on the Line: Kendall Square" Archived 2011-07-21 at the Wayback Machine. Cambridge Arts Council. 2002. Accessed May 30, 2010
- ^ a b c d e f g h Moy, Eva. "Kendall Sculptures Bring Music, Talk to Strangers". The Tech. January 24, 1996. Accessed May 27, 2010
- ^ a b c Daniel, Mac. "This Matisse seeks a patron". The Boston Globe. June 18, 2007. Accessed May 27, 2010.
- ^ "The Musical Fence". DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum [website]. Archived from the original on March 15, 2012. Retrieved May 6, 2011.
- ^ Temin, Christine (August 31, 1997). "Answering the SOS for public art". The Boston Globe. pp. N1, N6 – via Newspapers.com.
- hdl:1721.1/115453. Retrieved July 1, 2023.
- ^ Temin, Christine (May 28, 1995). "Keeping art fit to a T". The Boston Globe. pp. B17, B22 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b c Zhang, Whitney. "MIT Concourse team restores Kendall T Station's musical installation". The Tech. Retrieved March 21, 2018.
- ^ a b c d Hao, Ziwei. Students band together to save Band Archived 2016-10-04 at the Wayback Machine. The Tech. February 19, 2010. Accessed May 27, 2010
- ^ "Kendall Square T station music installation back in working order". Wicked Local Cambridge. Cambridge Chronicle. Archived from the original on September 28, 2013.
- ^ Moskowitz, Eric (March 27, 2011). "And the band is set to play on after students' efforts for Kendall Station". Boston.com.
- ^ Pfeiffer, Sacha (April 20, 2011). "Musical Artwork At Kendall T Station Will Soon Ring Again". WBUR. Retrieved July 1, 2023.