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Marcel Duchamp (Hardcover)
Marcel Duchamp; Robert L. Ebel; Edited by Jean-Jacques Lebel; Foreword by Harald Falckenberg; Introduction by Michaela Unterdoerfer; Text written by …
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Nude Descending a Staircase is one of the best known works of art
in tihs century. It caused a sensation at the historic Armory Show
of 1913, being damned by one critic as "an explosion in a shingle
factory." Yet the criticism in no way perturbed it imperturable
creator, Marcel Duchamp. Duchamp's "readymades" (the urinal singed
by R. Mutt and entitled Fountain, the snow shovel entitled In
Advance of the Broken Arm, and other objects bought and exhibits as
works of art) are by now familiar objecs of critical derision and
delight. And Duchamp's influence has been pervasive throughout
modern art, fosterin Neo-Dada, Op Art, Pop Art, and Conceptual Art.
Marcel Duchamp's major work, The Bride Stripped Bare by her
Bachelors, Even (also known as The Large Glass) was left in a state
of "definitive incompletion" in 1923. The notes for this
extradordinarywork form the largest part of SALT SELLER. Duchamp
collected many of them for his Green Box in 1934, when their
publication was immediately hailed by Andre Breton as a major
intellectual event. The notes themselves will help the curious but
mystified spectator of The Large Glass in no simple or
straighforward way. They do, however, demonstrate wht an
extraordinarily original process the making of The Bride Stripped
Barde by Her Bachelors, Even was. Duchamp's wit is nowhere in
greater evidence than in the section "Rrose Selavy & Co."
Duchamp was photographed in women's apparel by Man Ray and created
a "readymade" female alter-ego Rrose Selavy ("Eros c'est la vie" or
"arroser la vie" - drink it up; celebrate life). Rrose printed a
calling card and her company advertised - "For practical wear, a
Rrose Selavy creation: The oblong cress, designed exclusively for
ladies afflicted with hiccups." The company also had a service
department which made "...home deliveries: domestic mosquitoes
(half stock.)" The surrealists had proclaimed in the twenties that
words were no longer playing around but had started making clove.
This description seems to fit the sayings of Rrose Selavy who
fashioned some of the most joyour and ingenious couplings and
uncouplings in modern literautre.' In the section "Marcel Duchamp,
Criticavit", the more serious side of Duchamp is represented by two
informative interviews and two important statements on art, "The
Creative Act" and "Apropos of Readymades." His more experimental
writings are grouped under the title "Texticles." Taken together
these varied writings constitute a major document of modern art.
Whether the reader sits back and enjoys the charms of Duchamp or
studies and attempts to decipher his inner-most secrets, the reader
will find SALT SELLAR a compendium of delight.
A novel and a memoir of a triangular relationship during the early
days of the Dada movement in New York along with its creative
progeny, two magazines: The Blindman and Rongwrong. Henri-Pierre
Roche is best known for his novel Jules et Jim, based on the
three-sided relationship between himself, the artist Marcel Duchamp
and the actress Beatrice Wood.
With his Boite-en-valise, or Museum in a Box, Duchamp embarked on
one of his more ambitious projects: a portable museum of miniature
replicas and facsimiles created with the help of elaborate
reproduction techniques as pochoir (a type of hand stencilling) and
comprising his most important works. Conceived in the mid-1930s and
consisting of eighty-one items, it was first released in 1941 and
continued to be assembled in various editions until after his
death, with the final seven different series totalling about 300
items. This publication is a facsimile of the series D, 1961
edition. Created with the full approval of the Duchamp Estate, it
contains a reproduction of The Large Glass on Plexiglas, colour
reproductions of his pictures, reproductions of his drawings and a
selection of his humorous texts, a glass vial of Parisian air, a
urinal, a small sugar dispenser, 'canned chance' and other
miscellanea, all housed in a green cardboard box.
Marcel Duchamp: one of his themes was the boundary between works of
art and everyday objects, and with it, he set the art world in an
uproar. Surely one of his most brilliant strokes of genius was the
Fountain, a urinal he put on display. There are, of course, many
more works that bear his signature, and the Duchamp Collection in
Schwerin has ninety-two of them. Founded in 2009, the research
centre has succeeded in establishing an interdisciplinary, globally
connected network of researchers in Schwerin. Under the title
Marcel Duchamp: Inventing the Presence, individual as well as
groups of artworks from the Schwerin collection are examined from
philosophical, art historical, and literary perspectives in volume
five of the series Poiesis.
In the twenties, Surrealists proclaimed that words had stopped
playing around and had begun to make love. Nowhere is this more
apparent than in the writings of Marcel Duchamp, who fashioned some
of the more joyous and ingenious couplings and uncouplings in
modern art. This collection beings together two essential
interviews and two statements about his art that underscore the
serious side of Duchamp. But most of the book is made up of his
experimental writings, which he called "Texticles," the long and
extraordinary notes he wrote for The Bride Stripped Bare By Her
Bachelors, Eben (also known as The Large Glass ), and the
outrageous puns and alter-ego he constructed for his female self,
Rrose Selavy ("Eros, c'est la vie" or arouser la vie", drink it up"
celebrate life"). Wacky, perverse, deliberately frustrating, these
entertaining notes are basic for understanding one of the twentieth
century's most provocative artists, a figure whose influence on the
contemporary scene has never been stronger.
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