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Miraculous Writing Machine

Friedrich von Knaus German

Not on view


Presented to Empress Maria Theresa in Vienna in 1760, this automaton was made at the height of the "century of writing." Written communication connected scientists, dignitaries, scholars, and artists across long distances, and the act of writing was celebrated in every form. This piece is the last in a series of increasingly complicated ones that Friedrich von Knaus produced during his tenure as Austrian court machinist; he presented other examples to dignitaries such as the French king Louis XV and Duke Charles Alexander of Lorraine.

Video

The machine writes through the hand of the small statuette seated at its top, one of the first mechanical writing figures in human form. The video nearby shows the mechanisms inside the sphere that produce its precise movements. Up to 107 words can be preprogrammed by the arrangement of pegs on a barrel. The figure can also be set via a hand-worked control to appear to write from dictation; this technology that presaged the first typewriter.

Miraculous Writing Machine, Friedrich von Knaus (German, 1724–1789), Iron, brass, bronze (cast, some colored), paper, wood (with marbleized stucco, gilding), Austrian, Vienna

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