Homage to New York was a kinetic artwork composed of found mechanical parts including multiple bicycle wheels, a weather balloon, a piano, a radio, an American flag, a bassinet, and a toilet, all painted white.
In its first and only performance in the New York Museum of Modern Art sculpture garden on March 17, 1960, the machine whirred to life with the sounds and smells of its mechanical motion.
In one section, the piano played while glass bottles dropped from above, shattering and releasing noxious odors.
[1] In February 1960, Museum of Modern Art curator for painting and sculpture Peter Selz commissioned artist Jean Tinguely to make a self-destructing machine to perform in the museum's sculpture garden.
Tinguely found its components among scraps, junk, garbage dumps, and shops in New Jersey and New York City.