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Figure 2
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Figure 3
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Marcel Duchamp, Nude
Descending A Staircase, No. 2, 1912
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Marcel Duchamp, L.H.O.O.Q.,
1919
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Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968) is best known for a painting
called Nude Descending a Staircase of 1912, a painting that helped
to introduce Modern Art to New York with a bang in 1913. (Fig.
2) Almost as famous is his humorous act of putting
a mustache and goatee on a reproduction of Leonardo's Mona Lisa in
1919. (Fig. 3)
Duchamp is widely
thought of as the "Daddy of Dada," as that movement developed
during World War I, and as the "Grandpa of Pop," as Pop Art
developed during the 1950s and 1960s, as well as the "Conceiver
of Conceptual Art." He was all that and more. During the first
half of the twentieth century, Picasso and Matisse usually were thought
of as the most influential "Artists of the Century." That
evaluation has now changed. Looking back over the last hundred years
as a whole, Duchamp now is widely regarded as the most influential artist
of the century.
With remarkable
spontaneity and seemingly effortless ease, he put forth a lifelong series
of revolutionary objects and attitudes including a remarkable non-attachment
to fame or fortune. His modesty astonished everyone who knew him, while
his ideas have inspired countless artists. Duchamp's influence, which
started during the period of Dada & Surrealism, continued to grow
during the Abstract Expressionist era of Pollock and de Kooning and
the Neo-Dada era of Johns and Rauschenberg. It is often said that there
are few major artists of the last fifty years who were not influenced
by Duchamp in one way or another. His influence continues to expand
in ever widening waves around the world today.
He gave new status
to artists by saying art is whatever an artist says is art, not what
critics say art is. In a world that had come to rely too much on reason,
he emphasized the intuitive side of our brain by his explorations of
chance and open-endedness, an open-endedness that said the viewer is
the co-creator of every work of art. In short, he democratized art in
a new way.
Duchamp also was
fascinated by science, especially electromagnetism. What electromagnetic
energy is, and how it moves through our bodies and throughout the universe,
occupied much of his thinking. Any number of his works bring together
left-brain science with right-brain visualizations, not as scientific
statements but as playful parodies of science.
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Figure 4
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Marcel Duchamp, The Bride
Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even, 1915-1923
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In another famous work called The Bride Stripped Bare
By Her Bachelors, Even, (Fig. 4) 1915-1923
(or "The Large Glass," as it came to be called), the Bride and the Bachelors
are divided and never touch, yet they are connected by "wireless" energy.
He later used telephone lines to symbolize this flowing of love-energy
back and forth, and reminded us that people, not communication systems,
are the real "media."
He grew tired
of art that appeals only to the eye, and worked to elevate contemporary
art above the merely visual and physical to the level of the metaphysical.
His philosophical statements are among the most profound in the history
of art.
Nevertheless, his verbal
and visual statements often are surrounded and penetrated by humor.
His wisdom comes wrapped in a smile. By using a good many words with
his images, and by leaving meanings open-ended, he required that we
think and feel at the same time. There was method to this left-brain/right-brain
approach to experience.
He based much
of his work on the ideal of Androgyny (true male-female balance). Bringing
together within ourselves the so-called "male" capacity to
be rational and the so-called "female" capacity to be intuitive
is the stated goal of the meditative traditions within Taoism, Hinduism,
Buddhism, Judaism, Islam, and Christianity. This dynamic harmony is
said to be a key to Enlightenment.
Enlightenment
(as they understood it) became the objective of many modern artists
in their non-religious quest for wholeness, their secular search for
the sacred. However, few if any were able to attain this ideal. Various
kinds of self-centeredness got in the way. Duchamp was not without shortcomings
(especially in his early years) and may not have attained total selflessness,
but he seems to have come closer than most. Whatever his limitations,
Duchamp was widely regarded by major artists on both sides of the Atlantic
ocean as a highly "evolved" human being - perhaps not fully
enlightened, but more so than anyone else they were likely to meet.
In place of the
usual (and often egocentric) insistence on self-expression in art, Duchamp
pointed out that self-centeredness can be removed from the artistic
process, or at least moved off-center. With his "ready-mades"
(anonymous manufactured objects he selected and signed), he generated
the idea of art-without-artists, and thus opened even further the opportunity
for image-making to everyone. Selecting, he said, is a creative act.
Moreover, by often replicating his earlier works as editions of multiples,
his concept of "self" moved even further away from the object
and opened out toward the not-self. The unification of self and not-self
is the aim of traditional metaphysical philosophy.
While emphasizing
concepts and deprecating the "retinal," he never lost respect
for well-crafted quality. His objects were made with loving care, as
were his relationships with others. Duchamp celebrated human nature
in general and the erotic impulse in particular, advising above all
loving and being loved. He also thought of the relationship between
art and life as a kind of oneness. And all along the way he recommended
laughter.
Many books and
exhibition catalogues have been devoted to Duchamp. Some think there
is nothing more to be said. However, there are neglected areas, for
example, his metaphysical philosophy. In part, this is because formalist
art history, which dominated most of the twentienth century, had no
interest in metaphysics. As a rule, the philosophy of artists has been
studied only by post-formalist art historians in recent decades.
This book is an
exploration of the metaphysical realm of Duchamp's thought. At the core
of this exploration is an analysis of the symbolism of "androgyny."
Why? Because, as I hope to demonstrate, this underexplored theme was
central to his work from the 1910s to the 1960s, and was a direct expression
of his metaphysical thinking.
What is the meaning
of "androgyny"? Several quite different definitions of "androgyny"
are in use today. The most superficial definitions have been popularized
by Hollywood films, where the term usually refers to "women who
act like men," or "men who dress like women," or someone
whose physical features make it unclear whether that person is male
or female. A less superficial use of the term is used in the gay and
lesbian community where people often call themselves "androgynes,"
feeling a special kinship with the ancient Greek world where homosexuality
was common and considered natural.
The modern term "androgyne"
comes from the Greek language and combines words meaning man [andros]
and woman [gune]. Many gay, lesbian, bisexual, and intersexual people
celebrate a psychology which combines elements usually thought of as
male with elements usually thought of as female.
In biology and
botany, "androgyny" identifies plants and animals who have
the capacity to change sex or to fertilize themselves. In the medical
community, the term "androgyny" is used for people who are
born with ambiguous genitalia, or (in very rare instances) are born
with both a sexually functional penis and a sexually functional vagina. More
often than not, such intersexual individuals are called hermaphrodites.
"Hermaphrodite"
is another Greek term that combines the name of the god Hermes with the
name of the goddess Aphrodite. It is an oddity of history that the Greeks
worshipped deities who were double-sexed, as did many people around the
world. However, if a Greek child was born with double genitalia s/he was
killed as a monster.
There is another
definition of "androgyny," one that is much older than any of
those in common use today, one that is not even found in most dictionaries.
This metaphysical definition is even older than the civilizations of Greece
and Egypt. It goes back to the Stone Age, but seldom is discussed in scholarship
today except by historians of mythology and religion.
The great World
Religions of today usually are identified as Taoism, Hinduism, Buddhism,
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. All of them have some of their roots
in the spiritual traditions of our Stone Age ancestors who, for thousands
of years, venerated the Androgyne as a deity. The public (or exoteric)
doctrines and rituals of today's World Religions usually make no reference
to the Androgyne or Androgyny. However, the ancient Androgyne has endured
as the image of a spiritual goal in the contemplative (or esoteric) teachings
of all these religions--teachings traditionally available only in monastic
settings for people who have made a total commitment to self-transformation
in order to be greater service to the world.
Everyone interested
in comparative religion is familiar with the symbolism of Yin-Yang in
Taoism, Shiva-Shakti in Hinduism, Yab-Yum in Tibetan Buddhism, etc. These
unusual symbols of oneness/two-ness are not limited to Asian religions. All
World Religions symbolize themselves with visual forms that have a double
structure. Consider the double triangle of Judaism, the star & crescent of
Islam, and the horizontal & vertical elements of the Christian Cross.
As with all mythological
symbols, there are many levels of symbolism associated with these images
of what might be described as bi-singularity. Among the most commonly
discussed are the relationships between the tribe and the transcendent,
between the individual and the divine, between male and female, between
active and receptive, between spirit and matter, etc.
Among historians
of sacred symbolism, it is widely accepted that these images symbolize
both the appearance of duality (to ordinary ways of looking) and the larger
truth of nonduality - the ultimate cosmic unity of all reality. In short,
these double-images of nonduality represent a basic metaphysical teaching:
what may seem to be two-ness actually is oneness when seen from a higher
level of perception.
There are a handful
of symbols that have been used in World Religions for many centuries to
represent universal unity. One of the best known is the image of the circle-square
usually called a "Mandala," from the Sanskrit term for sacred
circle or sacred space. Generally speaking, the square stands for matter,
or the material world of forms, while the circle stands for the infinite
spirit that surrounds and permeates all forms. Less widely known is the
traditional image of the Androgyne in which maleness and femaleness are
combined in a single human figure. In the traditional literature, the
term Androgyne is capitalized because of its transcendent meaning. So
it will be in this book when that specific meaning is intended.
While the Mandala
image represents a condition, the condition of cosmic unity, the Androgyne
image represents one who has continuous awareness of this unity and therefore
is said to have "cosmic consciousness." In the public art of
Taoism, Hinduism, and Buddhism, for example, Androgynous deities often
are shown as part male & part female. In the esoteric art of these
traditions, the teaching is that not only deities but human beings can
have this transcendent consciousness. Illustrations of traditional Androgyne
art appear in Chapter Two. A bibliography of the comparatively new field
of Androgyny Studies is at the end of this book.
A rounded view of
this primal meaning of Androgyny, and how Duchamp used his understanding
of that meaning in his work, is the subject of this book. Our point of
departure is a conversation I had with Duchamp when I was a young curator
at New York's Museum of Modern Art. Here is part of what was said:
| LG: |
May we call your perspective
Alchemical? |
| MD: |
We may. It is an Alchemical understanding.
But don't stop there! If we do, some will think I'll be trying to
turn lead into gold back in the kitchen [laughing]. Alchemy is a kind
of philosophy, a kind of thinking that leads to a way of understanding.
We may also call this perspective Tantric (as Brancusi would say),
or (as you like to say) Perennial. The Androgyne is not limited to
any one religion or philosophy. The symbol is universal. The Androgyne
is above philosophy. If one has become the Androgyne one no longer
has a need for philosophy. |
####PAGES####
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Androgyny & Perennial Philosophy
| "It is essential...to undertake the reconstruction
of the primordial
Androgyne that all traditions tell us of...within ourselves."
- - André Breton, On Surrealism in its Living
Works (1953) |
Duchamp was so full of humor that many
overlook how philosophical he also was. When asked what adjective would
best describe his work, Duchamp replied: "metaphysical if any."From an early period, his primary purpose seems to have been first
to find the transcendent, and then, as an artist, to suggest the transcendent
realities of metaphysical truth. He phrased his transcendental goal in
various ways. For example, "...art is an outlet toward regions which are
not ruled by time and space."He later said: "...the artist acts like a mediumistic being who, from
the labyrinth beyond time and space, seeks his way out to a clearing."
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| Figure 5 |
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Marcel Duchamp,
Portrait of Dr. Dumouchel, 1910 |
One of the earliest indications of Duchamp's interest
in the esoteric was his 1910 portrait of his friend, Dr. Dumouchel, showing
an aura around his body, an aura that is particularly luminous around his
healing hands (Fig. 5).
How Duchamp came to be interested in esoteric ideas is unclear. Might it
have have been after reading some books about Theosophy or Alchemy? Perhaps.
The subject requires further study. However his interest in metaphysics
began, that interest obviously was strong about 1910-11 when his art was
moving from Fauvism toward Cubism and beyond. While Duchamp was not interested
in metaphysical systems, he was very interested in metaphysical thinking
- the kind of thinking that moves the mind beyond duality towards what he
described as "regions which are not ruled by time and space."
His way of thinking about metaphysical symbols was not part
of a system but does parallel what is known as Perennial Philosophy. Perennial
Philosophy is so called because it seems to have been present for as long
as there has been philosophy, and because it has continued to appear century
after century in Taoism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, and
Islam. All these traditions have their own uniqueness. Many of their public
or exoteric beliefs are different from one another. Nevertheless, students
of comparative religion have found that there is a body of esoteric beliefs
that is common to all of them. This common core of understanding is now
widely known as Perennial Philosophy. Here is a concise summary:
Beneath, beyond,
around, and through all manifested reality is an invisible reality that
is formless. It also is infinite, eternal, luminous, and loving. In Western
traditions, this is often called the Ground-of-Being, or Unconditioned
Consciousness. As a rule, only a few are aware of this transcendent reality
continuously. Ordinary egocentricity prevents the possibility of such
awareness. Most people suffer all through life because they are bound
within a self-referential psychology. This prison of the ego, this shell
of selfishness, also prevents people from understanding what life can
be like if one is ego-free, free to be world-centered rather than self-centered,
free to be all-loving rather than loving only one's self. Selfish desires
condition consciousness and cause constant suffering. There are many ways
to break through this egocentric shell and begin to "glimpse light
through the cracks." Every tradition has its own methods.
Enlightenment or
Illumination are names given to breaking through to a higher level of
awareness. Breaking through, it is said, often takes place slowly, gradually,
in painful stages. In the language of Tantric Hinduism and Tantric Buddhism,
one moves up through chakras to higher levels of awareness. There are
parallel stages of development in Christian Alchemy and Jewish Kabbalah.
Semi-Enlightened stages include proto-Androgynous awareness
of dualities reconciling, of male and female elements uniting. In Alchemy
what results from this Mystic Marriage is the Androgyne whose Golden Consciousness
transforms life. Is the situation similar in yoga? Mircea Eliade reports
that it is: "The union of the divine pair within his own body transforms
the yogi into [an] 'androgyne'."
How old are such teachings in the West? Certainly there
was Androgynous thinking in early Christianity, long before medieval Alchemists
focused on the image of the Androgyne. In one of Paul's letters in the
New Testament he states that, after Baptism, "There is neither...
male nor female, for ye are all one in Jesus Christ." According to another early Christian document, the Second Epistle
of Clement, when Jesus was asked at what moment the Kingdom of Heaven
would come, the answer was: "When the two shall be one, the outside like
the inside, the male with the female neither male nor female."robably even older is the Jewish oral tradition recorded in
the Zohar of the Kabbalah: "It behooves a man to be 'male and female'
always...."t would be a mistake to think Androgyny is only an old ideal;
its reality is very much alive. Consider, for example, this testimony
from the contemporary Chinese Zen master Chuan Yuan Shakya. She recently
reported: "Zen masters treat any monk who attains androgyny as if he were
truly royal."
The Perennial Traditions
teach that even higher levels of consciousness exist beyond Androgyny. To
suggest the nature of the "beyond" there is a special metaphor
in Zen. Enlightenment or Satori is described as "entering the stream." At
a higher stage one "becomes the water." The first step towards
transcending the Little Self, and attaining totally fluid consciousness,
is realizing there is more to life than the realm of the senses, the realm
of self-satisfaction, the realm of space and time. Beyond space and time,
where rational analysis and sense perceptions work, is the realm of eternity. According
to Perennial Philosophy, eternity is not a long time; eternity is beyond
time. Illuminated awareness is said to take place when time and timelessness
are linked permanently, when the finite and the infinite always are perceived
as aspects of each other continuously commingling, when the world and
Nothingness are one.
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| Figure 6 |
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Marcel
Duchamp, The Chess Players, etching of 1965, after a drawing
of 1911 |
Such teachings were very important to many major artists
of Modernism in their secular search for the spiritual. Artists of the Surrealist
era were especially interested in various esoteric traditions from Alchemy
to Zen. One of these artists was Duchamp. If he had not had some kind of
insight into the nature of the transcendent realm, Duchamp might well have
continued as a follower of the Cubists, as in his quasi-Cubist composition
of 1911 The Chess Players (Fig. 6).
Chess was his favorite game, and he worked out many pictorial space-time
problems
| Click to
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| Figure 7 |
| Marcel Duchamp,
Bride, 1912 |
around this theme. But he soon saw all this "retinal art" (as he called
it) as extremely limited. He wanted to return art to something that could
be (as he said) "at the service of the mind."
In 1912 came
Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2 and then the Bride
(Fig. 7), as Duchamp rapidly moved past the
last vestiges of Cubism toward purely mental, imaginary images. The new
images start to center on semi-mechanical metaphors. In the process of
changing styles, Duchamp was seriously questioning selfhood. He told Pierre
Cabanne how much he had been regretting that art no longer had its traditional
functions: "religious, philosophical, moral."He looked back on the Dada movement that developed during
World War I as not just fun and games (even though that was a large part
of it), but also as:
...an extreme protest against the physical side of painting.
It was a metaphysical attitude. ... It was a way to get out of
a state of mind...to get free.
Dada was very serviceable as a purgative. And I think I was
thoroughly conscious of this at the time and of a desire to effect
a purgation in myself. ...
Duchamp also recalled : "My intention was always to get
away from myself...".
It is said that once Little Self is out of the way, or at
least set aside a bit, windows rapidly open toward hitherto unknown realms.
One of the radical questions Duchamp was asking himself early on was,
"Can one make works which are not works of 'art'?"
One of his radical answers was the revolutionary "ready-made",
which he described as "a work of art for which there is no artist."is ready-mades were industrial products that
he selected and signed, declaring them works of art. He went on to redefine
art in a highly democratic way by stating that art is whatever an artist
says is art (not what critics say is art). Many critics still hate him
for that. By removing the "artist" from the center of the concept of art,
Duchamp also seems to have been removing the assumed importance of his
own Little Self, and thus the whole ego-centered idea of self-importance
and self-expression. In short, he seems to have been moving toward Androgyny.
There are a number
of traditional indications of how much a person is self-centered. One
is aggressiveness. Duchamp was anything but aggressive. He was gentle
and humorous, confident and resolute; he never forced himself on others.
Another traditional indication is how much money and material wealth one
thinks one needs. Duchamp had little desire for money. His indifference
to it was legendary. Duchamp owned very little. For most of his life what
he owned would fit into a couple of suitcases and a few boxes. Another
sign is whether or not one needs to dominate a conversation, and make
others agree with you. Duchamp went out of his way to allow people their
positions, as people, as artists, or as critics, even if he did not agree.
Was he also spontaneous
and humorous? Yes. Indeed, he loved word-play and was an incurable punster.
Another indication of Androgyny is said to be how much attention is paid
to what others think of you, and how you treat other people. Duchamp seldom
bothered to read what people wrote about him. Nor, for most of his life,
did he feel the need to exhibit what he made. He did not have a retrospective
exhibition until 1963. He also tried to live without selling his unique
work, except to a few private patrons, by working in a library, teaching
French, dealing Brancusi's art, and selling multiples.
Was he also generous
and supportive of others? Yes. Was he able to feel so deeply into the
heart of other artists that even short conversations with him often were
transformative experiences? Yes. Many artists have testified to that. Indeed
it is often said that no major artist of the last fifty years was not
affected by Duchamp to some degree. Several thick books could be written
on that subject.
Was he also deeply
involved with experiencing and communicating transpersonal truth? Very
much so. Did he frequently point toward the transcendent in his work? Yes,
as we shall see. According to the Perennial teachings, this is what Androgynous
people do, and they do it with spontaneous fluidity and grace. Did his
thoughts and actions proceed with unusual fluidity and grace? Yes. Here,
for example, is an observation by Georgia O'Keeffe:
It was probably in the early twenties when I first saw Duchamp.
...
I don't remember seeing anyone else at the party, but Duchamp was
there... .
I was drinking tea. When I finished he rose from the chair, took
my teacup
and put it down at the side with a grace that I had never seen
in anyone before
... . I don't remember anything else about the party.
Duchamp's dear friend Beatrice Wood expressed the feelings
of many: "He had the objectivity of a guru. His mind touched stillness,
beholding the unity of life."rturo Schwarz, his dealer and cataloger, said: "I dare say he
was a guru, in the Indian sense of the word. He would not, of course,
have favored being so called. ... His simplicity was a way of being, modesty
was never a pose with him, he was as natural as his breath. He was generous
and understanding. ... his advice could not have been wiser and his concern
would never be merely skin deep."
The traditional
teaching is that so long as one's awareness is contained within the psychological
sphere of the ego, one cannot see beyond the realm of space and time. However,
Duchamp obviously was moving beyond that. He was very much involved with
perceiving and evoking the realm he described as "beyond time and
space." If we assume that one has connected some of one's personal,
qualifying consciousness with the unqualified consciousness, how can one
express the transcendent experience of those higher realities? Words
work well to identify realities that exist inside the measurable world,
the sphere of space and time. Beyond that sphere, any attempt to use words
in the usual descriptive way is useless. How can one pictorialize the
invisible? How to verbalize or visualize the transcendent are parallel
problems. The most one can do is to suggest the transcendent with symbols
and metaphors.
Much of Duchamp's
work appears to have been the result of his efforts to do just that. Yet
he is dismissed by some as merely humorous if not nihilistic. If there
is something more, how might we find the wisdom that he wrapped in so
many smiles? My approach has been to listen closely to his words, examine
the philosophical context in which he did much of his thinking, and then
focus on a singular metaphor that he used regularly, the Androgyne. Such
an analytical approach (alas) will be somewhat more linear and "heavier"
than Duchamp's light touch. Keep in mind that much of what he said was
said with a smile, and that seems to be true of his visual work as well.
####PAGES####
|
The Androgyne Before & After Duchamp
| "The true mythical androgyne is
equally male and female at the same time."
Wendy Doniger,
Women, Androgynes, & other Mythical Beasts (1980)
"...spiritual
perfection consists precisely in rediscovering with oneself this
androgynous nature."
Mircea Eliade, The Two and The One (1969) |
As already noted,
certain sacred symbols have been in use continuously for centuries. Among
the best-known are double images of nonduality, e.g., those by which world
religions symbolize themselves: the Yin-Yang of Taoism, the Circle-Square
(or Mandala) of Buddhism, the Double Triangle of Judaism, and the Cross
of Christianity. As has been discussed, each symbol is both a two-ness
and a oneness. All these double images are intended to remind us of the
higher unity that transcends all forms of multiplicity. What seems to
be two is one ultimately. Spirit and matter are one. Sky and Earth are
one. Male and female are one.
All those double
images of nonduality are rendered in a visual language that is geometric. Geometry
as a sacred visual language did not become common until after the Old
Stone Age. In other words, abstract geometric forms of this type are part
of the settled, post-nomadic experience. There are other double-images
images of nonduality which are much older, going back to the Old Stone
Age. This group is pictorial, naturalistic, not geometric. The best known
examples include the Double-Serpent, which began in the Paleolithic era
and has continued into our time as the medical caduceus, and the Flying
Serpent whose various forms include the Quetzalcoatl of the Aztecs, and
the cosmic Dragons of Asia. The heavenly and the earthly are united in
this symbol of what might be called bi-singularity.
The least known
of these primordial pictorial symbols is the Androgyne - a single human
body which is part-male and part-female. The Androgyne image also has
been with us since the Paleolithic era. In Asia it is better known than
in the West, where its history and meaning usually are studied only by
students of sacred art, archeology, religion, and mythology. Like all
works of sacred art, images of the Androgyne are teachings in and of themselves--visual
expressions of metaphysical truth.
| Click to
enlarge |
 |
| Figure 8 |
|
Androgynes from
Around The World: Europe, India, China, the Middle East, & the Americas |
To introduce this mythic image - its structure, antiquity,
and ubiquity - I prepared a digital collage of images from the tribal world
to the modern world (Fig. 8).
In this collage, we see a Stone Age work from North America, a Bronze Age
image from the Near East, the Goddess Kuan Yin (with a mustache) from China,
Shiva-Shakti from India, and an Alchemical Androgyne from Christian Europe.
Each visual metaphor is different, but the essential teaching is the same.
Nonduality refers to the highest possible level of human consciousness.
The purpose of an
"illuminating image" is to illuminate. As an image that is a
teaching, it can be approached in various ways. Monks can meditate deeply
for years on the meaning of Androgyny as they work to become Androgynes
themselves. For first-time viewers, the image can be quite shocking.
It is a very irrational image. Logic cannot comprehend it. Happily, there
are other ways of knowing.
A well-delivered
shock can jolt the first-time viewers out of their habitual reliance on
linear, left-brain logic. The experience can be like what happens when
one tries to deal with a Zen koan, for example, trying to answer the question
"What is the sound of one hand clapping?" When logic proves
useless, one tends to shift into intuitive, right-brain modes of knowing. That
is exactly what the abbot of every Zen koan monastery wants the monks
to be doing.
Only when the intuition
of the monks is as highly developed as their reasoning are they ready
to graduate from the monastery and go out to be of service to the world. It
is this internal harmony of the "male & female" within us,
the "sun & moon" within us, reason and intuition within
us, that makes possible the highest form of human wholeness, an Enlightened
state of being. When Golden Consciousness emerges, according to the Perennial
Philosophy, one is no longer self-serving, or able to love in only qualified
ways. One exists for the benefit of others, and every act is an act of
love.
We can also consider
Androgyny from the perspective of modern brain science. At a 1978 conference
of psychologists and anthropologists on bimodality I presented a paper
demonstrating that there is a one-to-one relationship between how bilateral
Androgyne images are rendered in sacred art and the left/right brain. His/Her
left side (which actually is controlled by the right brain) always is
female. His/Her right side (which actually is controlled by the left brain)
always is male. Those present were as surprised as I was to see this relationship. Shortly
thereafter I was invited to teach the history of sacred art at the California
Institute of Asian Studies in San Francisco, where the faculty included
respected practitioners of the major spiritual traditions.
I asked each of
them if the newly discovered left/right brain is an appropriate metaphor
for the Perennial teaching of integrating our rational and intuitive faculties
in order to attain Enlightenment. Every teacher there, Christian, Jewish,
Hindu, Buddhist, and Taoist, said yes--with the qualification that scientific
understanding is only a partial understanding of traditional wisdom. A
similar answer was given to me by a number of Tibetan Buddhists, including
Lama Govinda, and the Venerable Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche. These interviews
supported my growing belief that the discovery of left/right brain was
not a trivial fad in popular psychology but something of special importance
for the modern world--a concrete, scientific way for anyone to start to
think about the psychodynamics of Androgyny and striking confirmation
of what Duchamp told me a decade earlier.
| Click
to enlarge |
|
 |
| Figure 9 |
Figure 10 |
|
Native American
Androgyne, Stone Age type |
African Androgyne
(Sudan), Stone Age type |
To see in more detail how Androgyny has been symbolized
in traditional sacred art, the following selection of images provides
a general overview of the various types of Androgyne iconography that
have been rendered around the world from the Stone Age to the present.epresenting the Stone Age is a painted image from North America.
This figure has breasts and an erect phallus (Fig.
9). Among the neolithic tribes of Africa, it is typical to see
images of the Androgyne with breasts and a beard (Fig.
10). That symbolism was continued by Bronze Age Egyptians. Other
Bronze Age artists portrayed the Androgyne as a single body with male
and female faces, often in association with the Double-Serpent and/or
the Sun-Moon (Fig. 11). More widely published
are Iron Age images of the Androgyne as a male-female with one breast,
as Shiva-Shakti is often seen in Hindu India where there are more sculpted
and painted Androgyne images than anywhere else (Fig.
12). In the esoteric tradition of Judaism, the image of Adam Kadmon
is central to the Kabbalah (Fig. 13). In the
esoteric tradition of Christianity, many versions of the Androgyne image
fill Alchemical books and manuscripts of the Renaissance. There are more
Androgyne images to be found in those books than anywhere else in the
Western art of the modern era (Figs. 14 & 15; 16
& 17). In all these spiritual traditions, the Androgyne symbolizes
both divinity among the Gods and Goddesses, and the possibility of psycho-cosmic
wholeness here on earth.
| Click
to enlarge |
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| Figure
11 |
Figure
12 |
Figure
13 |
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Neo-Babylonian Androgyne, Late Bronze Age/Early Iron Age
type |
Hindu
Androgyne (Ardhanarisvara / Shiva-Shakti), Iron Age type |
Jewish Androgyne (Adam Kadmon), Iron Age type |
| |
|
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| Figure 14 |
Figure 15 |
| Christian
Androgynes (Alchemical), 17th century |
Christian
Androgynes (Alchemical), 17th century |
 |
 |
| Figure 16 |
Figure 17 |
|
Christian
Androgynes (Alchemical), 17th and 18th centuries |
Christian
Androgynes (Alchemical), 17th & 18th centuries |
|
Those traditional
images, especially in Stone Age art and the Alchemical book illustrations
of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, were the type of Androgyne
images that were known to modern artists in the early twentieth century. Inspired
by such images, artists of the Dada-Surrealist era rendered many contemporary
variations on this ancient theme as they searched for Androgyny within
themselves. A comprehensive survey would show how virtually every major
artist of the Surrealist era focused on this iconography. What follows
is a small selection of their Androgyne images. The dates range from 1916
to 1954. Most of the artists represented in this portfolio were friends
of Duchamp.
| Click to
enlarge |
 |
| Figure18 |
|
Paul Klee, Barbarian's
Venus, 1921 |
Barbarian's Venus by Paul Klee (1879-1940) is
one of the most "barbaric" Androgyne images of the era. She is a Venus with
a penis (Fig. 18).
Klee was not a member of the Surrealist circle, but sometimes exhibited
with them. He was associated with Kandinsky and Marc in Munich in 1911 and
1912, then took from Cubism and Orphism the concept of fluctuating planes.
Klee was thought by some to be an Alchemist when he discussed the Absolute,
Nothingness, and the Ground of Being. His students at the Bauhaus (only
half in jest) called him "Heavenly Father." He was one of the first modern
artists to explore Androgyny in tribal art.
| Click to
enlarge |
| |
| Figure19 |
| Constantin Brancusi,
Princess X, 1916 |
Constantin Brancusi (1876-1957) was a very close friend
of Duchamp. He studied Androgyne symbolism first in Theosophy and then
in the tradition of Tibetan Buddhism. A book of Tibetan teachings was
on his bedside table for many years. He and Duchamp worked together, played
together, and seem to have shared many ideas about the etheric, the infinite,
and the Androgynous. Such concepts were central to both artists. In 1916
Brancusi sculpted Princess X (Fig. 19).
Most of the critics of the time did not like it. It was too abstract.
One was particularly offended by the phallic form. Similar criticism greeted
Brancusi's most famous work, "Bird in Space." Brancusi called it "Bird
of the Ether" because the upward thrust is toward the etheric realm, beyond
the realm of space and time, the realm that only Androgynous consciousness
can reach. In spite of the phallic interpretations of many viewers, "Bird
of the Ether" clearly is about not sexuality but transcendence.
| Click
to enlarge |
|
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| Figure
20 |
Figure
21 |
|
Jean Arp, Demeter, 1960 |
Jean Arp, Idol, 1950 |
Jean (Hans) Arp (1888-1966) often read Alchemical texts
by Jacob Boehme and felt art should lead beyond self-expression to spirituality.
He and his good friend Max Ernst made sure this attitude was part of the
Dada movement and early Surrealism. Later he was deeply inspired by Brancusi's
fluid style. He carved a number of beautiful Androgynes. His Demeter
makes use of the traditional Iron Age symbolism of the Goddess-God with
one breast (Fig. 20). For his Idol (Fig.
21) Arp seems to have gone farther back in time for his iconography,
back to the Androgyne symbolism of the Stone Age and Bronze Age, when
it was not uncommon for idols to have an abstract female body and a tall
abstract phallic neck/head (Figs. 22A &22B).
| Click
to enlarge |
|
 |
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| Figure
22A |
Figure
22B |
|
Old
Stone Age figures thought to be Androgynes |
New
Stone Age/Bronze Age figures thought to be Androgynes |
| Click to
enlarge |
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| Figure23 |
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Joan Miró,
Dawn Perfumed by a Shower of Gold, 1954 |
Joan Miró (1893-1983) spoke of wanting his art to express
the unity of the finite and the infinite. He was particularly interested
in Stone Age art in his later years and used the ancient phallic neck/head
symbolism of the Stone Age in his Androgynous painting "Dawn Perfumed by
a Shower of Gold." The lower part is quite female, while the upper part
is quite male (Fig. 23).
####PAGES####
|
Nudes, Rroses, etc.
"Is it
a woman? No. Is it a man? No. ...I have never thought which it is. Why
should I think about it?"
Marcel Duchamp discussing his painting Nude Descending a Staircase
of 1912 |
As
we have seen, Duchamp was not the only artist of the Dada-Surrealist era
interested in Androgyny. The image of the Androgyne was very important
to many of the major artists in this circle. They talked about Androgynes
in Alchemy, as well as in esoteric Hinduism and esoteric Buddhism wherein
the Androgyne also is a primal symbol for Enlightened consciousness. They
knew what the Androgyne is, and considered it the ideal condition of human
awareness. This is not to say that all these artists actually attained
Androgyny, but only to indicate that Androgyny was, to a large extent,
their common goal. Even though many Surrealist artists rendered images
of the Androgynes and were working towards the condition of Androgyny
within themselves, Duchamp devoted more years of his life to articulating
images of the Androgyne than any other major artist of the twentieth century,
with the possible exception of his good friend Max Ernst. More has been
written about Duchamp's Androgyne images than about anyone else's modern
Androgyne images, but the focus of most of the literature has been on
gender issues not metaphysics. This book is about metaphysics.
Some would begin the list of Duchamp's Androgyne images
with Nude
Descending a Staircase, No. 2 of 1912, his most famous painting.
While most people simply assume the nude is female, a close examination
reveals there is a gender question. Is the figure male or female? "Nu"
in French can mean male or female, and the visual evidence is not conclusive.
This very ambiguity is interpreted by some as being Androgynous, especially
in light of the unusual way Duchamp responded to the gender question in
a 1916 interview: "Is it a woman? No. Is it a man? No. To tell you the
truth, I have never thought which it is. Why should I think about it?"ome think the slightly later
Bride also is an Androgyne image, but that depends largely
on how one interprets The Large Glass.
Others
would begin the list with L.H.O.O.Q.
of 1919 where Duchamp added a mustache and beard to Leonardo's "Mona
Lisa," having heard that Leonardo was homosexual. This modified ready-made
clearly was intended as a joke, but it also clearly was a deliberate form
of Androgyne imagery.
| Click
to enlarge |
|
|
| Figure 24 |
Figure 25 |
|
Marcel
Duchamp, Fountain, 1917 (1964 replica) |
Marcel
Duchamp, Bottle Dryer, 1914 (1963 replica) |
Some would begin the Androgyne list two years earlier with
Fountain - the signed ready-made urinal of 1917(Fig.
24). To declare this plumbing fixture a work of art certainly was
a striking challenge to the aesthetic sensibilities of the time, and for
many still is a challenge. Even though it is now accepted as a work of
art, what might be Androgynous about it? Several people interested in
religion (as Duchamp himself was not) looked at this image in 1917 as
an abstract form of Buddha or the Virgin Mary. Male Buddha/Holy Mother?
Perhaps the combination of those two holy images would be an Androgyne?
It would echo the ancient idea of Androgyny if the combination of Divine
Mother/Divine Son were deliberate, but there's no evidence that this was
the case in Duchamp's mind. Some (with a Freudian psychology) see this
open receptacle as a female space into which a male enters. This may have
been slyly sexual symbolism on Duchamp's part, but the symbolism of common
copulation is not the iconography of Androgyny. The same goes for the
ready-made Bottle Dryer of 1914 (Fig. 25).
Some see the elements that hold the drying bottles as male and the implied
bottles as female. That symbolism may be humorously sexual, but it is
not inherently Androgynous.
Not so with the gender-bending character Duchamp created
as a female alter ego in 1920: Rrose Sélavy. After his Mona Lisa
of 1919, we find a string of Androgyne images in Duchamp's work, some
humorous, some serious. He worked on these Androgyne images every decade
for the rest of his life. Rrose even "signed" a number of major objects,
as well as most of his literary works over the next twenty years. Was
Duchamp homosexual? No. Was he bisexual? No. Neither was he homophobic.
He had any number of homosexual and bisexual friends. Did he dress in
drag regularly? No - only when making a work of art (Figs.
26, 27, 28). This series of male-female images from 1919 to 1942
certainly was intended to be amusing, but they also publicly propagated
the idea of Androgyny as "food for thought." He did not stop thinking
about the Androgyne. In 1946 Duchamp secretly began work on the monumental
Androgyne image that would occupy him for most of the rest of his life.
| Click
to enlarge |
| |
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| Figure 26 |
|
Figure 27 |
|
Figure 28 |
|
Marcel Duchamp, "Belle Haleine (Beautiful Breath)" Perfume
Bottle, with a photograph of Rrose Sélavy (alias Marcel Duchamp)
by Man Ray pasted on, 1921 |
|
Marcel Duchamp, RROSE SÉLAVY in the "Exposition Internationale
du Surréalisme," Paris, 1938 (female mannequin half dressed in Duchamp's
clothing) |
|
Marcel
Duchamp, Compensation-Portrait in the exhibition "First Papers of
Surrealism," New York, 1942 |
An early examination of the Androgyne in Duchamp's work was written by
Arturo Schwarz in the 1960s. Some of the theoretical assumptions of Schwarz
are quite strange, and have been rejected by a large number of Duchamp
specialists. His articulation of the meaning of Androgyny is often imaginative
and not always consistent. However, Schwarz deserves credit for his early
attempt to bring Androgyny into the art-historical dialogue around Duchamp.
He did so from the perspective of Alchemy, the basic principles of which
he has articulated clearly. Here is a passage from his essay "The
Alchemist Stripped Bare in the Bachelor, Even":
"...for the adept to achieve higher consciousness means,
in the first place, acquiring 'golden understanding' (aurea apprehensio)
of his own microcosm and of the macrocosm in which it fits. It is in the
course of his pursuit of the Philosopher's Stone that he acquires this
new awareness. Thus the quest is more important than its reward; as a
matter of fact, the quest is the reward. Alchemy is nothing other than
an instrument of knowledge - of the total knowledge that aims to open
the way toward total liberation. ... Individuation, in the alchemical
sense, entails abolishing the conflicting male-female duality within the
integrated personality... . Eliade has pointed out that 'to be no longer
conditioned by a pair of opposites results is absolute freedom'."
Some, including Schwarz,
Jack Burnham, Ulf Linde, John F. Moffitt, and others, have worked hard
to have us see Duchamp as an Alchemist. Duchamp, however, offered little
support for this belief. Indeed, he made efforts to deny it. When I met
Duchamp in 1967 I had been studying the symbolism of Alchemy for a number
of years and suspected that he might be an actual Alchemist.
While it is true
that the Androgyne is the goal of Alchemy, it is possible to have a particular
interest in the Androgyne without being an Alchemist. I did not understand
this at the time. Duchamp illuminated me. Here is how one of our conversations
went:
| LG: |
It seems that almost from the
beginning of your work as an artist, you have had a philosophical
attitude toward what being an artist is. In one of your interviews
with Sweeney, for example..., you describe Dada as a "metaphysical
attitude." What you have talked about and written is permeated with
the thought-feelings of a philosopher. At the end of your 1956 interview
with Sweeney, you spoke of art as a path "toward regions which are
not ruled by time and space." |
| MD: |
Was that the one filmed in Philadelphia? |
| LG: |
It was. |
| MD: |
Yes. Perhaps that is about as much as you
can say in a film being made for wide consumption. If one says too
much more, the result is simply a great deal of misunderstanding.
Understanding can only emerge from a co-experience, a non-verbal experience
which the artist and the onlooker can share by means of aesthetic
experience. So I leave the interpretation of my work to others. |
| LG: |
Nevertheless, I think it would be correct
to say that you regard the practice of art as a philosophical path
toward that which is beyond time and space. |
| MD: |
That is correct. That is my view, but only
part of my view. My view is beyond and back. Some get lost "out there."
My frame of reference is out of the frame and back again. |
| LG: |
That sounds like the dance
of the finite and infinite, stepping back and forth between three
dimensions and four dimensions, as Apollinaire or Mallarmé would say. |
| MD: |
So it does. No one says it better than
Mallarmé! |
| LG: |
May we call your perspective Alchemical? |
| MD: |
We may. It is an Alchemical understanding.
But don't stop there! If we do, some will think I'll be trying to
turn lead into gold back in the kitchen (laughing). Alchemy is a kind
of philosophy, a kind of thinking that leads to a way of understanding.
We may also call this perspective Tantric (as Brancusi would say),
or (as you like to say) Perennial. The Androgyne is not limited to
any one religion or philosophy. The symbol is universal. The Androgyne
is above philosophy. If one has become the Androgyne one no longer
has a need for philosophy. |
Notes
1. Duchamp in conversation with Lanier Graham, 1968.
Quoted in Graham, Marcel Duchamp: Conversations with The Grand Master
(New York: Handmade Press, 1968) 3. For more of this conversation, see
below, 5.
2. Duchamp in conversation with William Seitz, 1963.
Quoted in "What's Happened to Art?: An Interview with Marcel Duchamp"
in Vogue (15 Feb. 1963) 113.
3. Duchamp in conversation with J. J. Sweeney, 1956.
Quoted in Michel Sanouillet & Elmer Peterson, eds., Salt Seller:
The Writings of Marcel Duchamp (New York: Oxford University Press,
1973) 137. [hereafter "SS."]
4. Duchamp, "The Creative Act" - a talk in Houston at
a meeting of the American Federation of Art, 1957. Quoted in Sanouillet
138.
5.
The best-known book on this subject is Aldous Huxley, The Perennial
Philosophy (London: Chatto & Windus, 1946 & later editions). For
a bibliography, see Lanier Graham, "The Perennial Philosophy: A General
Bibliography" in Iconography of Infinity: Essays on Art & Philosophy,
vol. 2, no. 1 (Spring 1993). The best-known twentieth century writers
on this subject include Titus Burckhardt, A. C. Coomaraswamy, Réné Guenon,
Karl Jaspers, Frithjof Schuon, Huston Smith, Alan Watts, and Ken Wilber.
6.
Eliade, The Two and The One (New York: Harper Torhbook, 1965)
118.
7.
Galatians 3:28.
8.
The Gospel of Thomas 22 in Doresse, Les Livres Secrets des
Gnostiques d'Egypt, vol. 2 (Paris, 1959) 157.
9.
Scholem, ed., Zohar: The Book of Splendor (New York: Schocken
Books, 1977) 10.
11.
Duchamp in conversation with J. J. Sweeney, 1946. Quoted in SS 125.
12.
Duchamp in conversation with Pierre Cabanne. Quoted in Cabanne, Dialogues
with Marcel Duchamp (New York: Da Capo Press, 1967) 43.
13.
Duchamp in conversation with J. J. Sweeney, 1946. Quoted in SS 123.
14.
Duchamp in conversation with Katharine Kuh. Quoted in Kuh, Artist's
Voice: Talks with Seventeen Artists (New York: Harper & Row, 1962)
82. Duchamp went on to add: "though I knew perfectly well that I was
using myself. ... Call it a little game between 'I' and 'me'." It would
be interesting to collect all of Duchamp's statements about ego, self,
etc. Included would be the following from the Western Round Table on
Modern Art, San Francisco, 1949: "...the 'victim' of an esthetic echo
is in a position comparable to that of a man in love, or a believer,
who dismisses automatically his demanding ego and...submits... ". Quoted
in Clearwater, ed., West Coast Duchamp (Miami Beach, FL: Grassfield
Press, 1991) 107 and 110; Also this statement: "And artists are such
supreme egos! It's disgusting." Quoted in Tomkins, The Bride & The
Bachelors (New York: The Viking Press, 1965) 67.
15.
Duchamp. WB in SS 74
16.
Duchamp in conversation with Francis Roberts. Quoted in "I Propose to
Strain the Laws of Physics" in Artnews (Dec. 1968): 47. Duchamp
questioned himself this way in a 1913 WB note; IBID., and soon developed
the ready-made.
17.
O'Keeffe, quoted in d'Harnoncourt and McShine, eds., Marcel Duchamp
(Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1973) 212.
18.
Beatrice Wood, "Marcel," in Kuenzli and Naumann, eds., Marcel Duchamp:
Artist of the Century (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1987; 1990) 16. For
the story of their half-century relationship, see I Shock Myself:
The Autobiography of Beatrice Wood (San Francisco, CA: Chronicle
Books, 1988).
19.
Arturo Schwarz, "Marcel Duchamp, the Man, Even" in Kuenzli and Naumann,
eds., OP. CIT., 18.
20.
Most of the literature on Androgynes in art is limited to the historical
era, when there are written documents. The prehistoric images have been
more difficult to interpret owing to a lack of written documents. For
a century, scholars have had little to say about the many Stone Age figures
that clearly have female bodies but also have strange tall neck/heads.
Many figures of this type have been classified as having the shape of
a violin. No male/female symbolism was detected. In more recent scholarship
we find the fact that there seems to be an unbroken continuity of such
symbolism from the Old Stone Age through the New Stone Age, and the reasonable
theory that such figures with "phallic necks" are to be interpreted as
being male& female simultaneously. For illustrations of such female figures
with "phallic necks,"see Gimbutas, The Goddesses and Gods of Old Europe
6500-3500 BC (Berkeley , LA: University of California Press, 1974
& 1982; 1990) 133, 135, 154, 157, 202; and Gimbutas, The Language of
the Goddess (San Francisco, CA: HarperSanFrancisco, 1995) 82, 183,
230, 231, 232. The oldest figures of this female/male type in Old Europe
(#356 & #357) date from between about 20,000 and 15,000 BCE. For parallel
images from other parts of the world, see Lanier Graham, "The Great Goddess-God,
The Divine Androgyne," in Goddesses in Art (New York: Artabras,
1997) 43-47.
21.
Duchamp, quoted in Nixola Greeley-Smith, "Cubist Depicts Love in Brass
and Glass" in The Evening World, New York (Apr. 4, 1916) 3.
22.
Schwarz, in d'Harnoncourt & McShine, eds., OP. CIT. 82-83. Mircea Eliade
is the twentieth century's most widely respected historian of religions.
His name continues to appear in the Duchamp literature, e.g., Francis
M. Naumann, "Marcel Duchamp: A Reconciliation of Opposites" in Kuenzli
& Naumann, eds., Marcel Duchamp: Artist of the Century (Cambridge
and London: MIT Press, 1989) 40, note 30. Nothing was more important
to Eliade than the symbolism of the coincidentia oppositorum.
More Eliade citations are to be expected as Duchamp's metaphysics are
explored in more depth. During his visit to Kenyon College in 1960,
I asked Eliade this question: "In our seminar on the sacred art, I want
to be able to point to twentieth century artists who are still connected
to the sacred. Can you suggest any?" He replied: "That is a subject
I would like to write about. There are not too many in a society that
has lost touch with the sacred. But I would say Chagall is reaching
for Paradise, and Brancusi knows what it means to climb the axis mundi.
Brancusi connected modern art with the Primal, and thereby injected
a new vitality. Yes, I believe in Brancusi, and I'm told Brancusi believed
in Duchamp. Is his 'Mona Lisa with a Mustache' only a joke or is it
also an Androgyne? Several modern artists and writers have explored
Androgyny. They are connecting with the Primal. They are worth examining.
It also would be worthwhile to explore the abstract painters of today
who are reaching beyond the skin of matter for what is underneath."
See Eliade, Symbolism, The Sacred, & The Arts (New York: Crossroad/Herder
& Herder, 1986). A comprehensive study of the Androgyne in Surrealism
has not been written. It will include images by many Surrealist artists
and writers and such articles as Albert Béguin, "L'Androgyne" in Minotaure,
1938.
23.
Duchamp in conversation with Lanier Graham. Quoted in Graham, Marcel
Duchamp: Conversations with the Grand Master (New York: Handmade
Press, 1968) 2-3.
Figs. 2-7, 24-28
©2002 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris.
All rights reserved.
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