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| Figure
1 |
Linda
Dalrymple Henderson, Duchamp in Context: Science and
Technology in the Large Glass and Related Works,
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1998)
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| Figure
2 |
| Portrait
of Jean Francois Niceron (1613-46), 1646 |
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| Figure
3 |
| Marcel
Duchamp, Cover for A l'infinitif [a.k.a. The White Box],
1967 |
The
recent discovery by Rhonda Shearer of the influence of the Renaissance
geometer Niceron on Marcel Duchamp's Large Glass (note from White
Box) is confirmation of both his debt to Poincaré and his status
as a sophisticated geometer in his own right.
The
formidable academic scholarship of Professor Henderson may tend to limit
the overall influence of Poincaré in favor of a "smorgasbord mix"
of contemporary science on Duchamp's formulation of the Large Glass.
In another context, the brief introduction by Prof. Henderson of Niceron
missed an important contribution to the understanding of M.D.'s approach
to Optics and Perspective.
Similar
to his friend Apollinaire, Duchamp, in lieu of academic training, immersed
himself in intensive studies of Optics and Perspective (as opposed to
the generality of Apollinaire's varied studies) in the St. Genevieve
Library becoming, also a savant of the history of ideas. More information
about Duchamp makes it untenable to deny the focus of Duchamp on Poincaré's
ideas, as proposed in "Science and Method" and "Science
and Hypothesis."
A
concern with Optics and Perspective is common to Duchamp, Poincaré and
Leonardo (in his Notebook). This focus on the geometry of vision
is inseparable from the physiology of vision and the mechanics governing
perception. Such a density of material, presented to even the most sophisticated
public, might require a "light touch" (not of the hand, so
despised by Duchamp) in presentation. Comic relief is afforded by such
notions as "hilarious invention." Niceron himself, in "La
Perspective Curieuse," is at no loss for subtle jokes at the expense
of the Pope's Turkish foes!
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| Figure
4 |
| Marcel
Duchamp, Plate of
Eau & Gaz à tous les étages
affixed to the box for the limited edition of Robert Lebel's
Sur Marcel Duchamp, 1958
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Blake
wrote, "energy is eternal delight." This sums up the pervasive
erotic element which everywhere humanizes Duchamp's exploration of the
theme of a universal energy which ascends from the prosaic "Bachelor
Realm" to the higher dimension proper to the "Bride."
This vary complex being, the Bride, seems to embody a gradient of stages
(gas on all floors) from the strictly mechanical, to the electromagnetic,
to the Wasp of Fabre, the etymologist, to Rrose Sélavy and -- perhaps
-- in some empyrean splendor, the Virgin Mary herself.
The
concept of a continuum of progressive states from the micro to the macro-scotic
realms is essential to both Poincaré and Duchamp. Such a progression
implies, at some point, a separation in dimensions which nonetheless
still communicate. Thus, the Bachelor Realm is redeemed from isolation
and yet supplied the gross fuel, which undergoes transformations as
a distilled essence, at last arrives to nourish the Bride and to enable
her, in turn, to provide for the limited world of the Bachelors a way
of transcending their prescribed orbits, clothed in liveries and uniforms
of stultifying conformity.
Everywhere
this continuum appears buffeted by chance or, more accurately, refined
by chance, so that an alternative to the dead stasis of thermodynamic
equilibrium is revealed in the universal play of energy states--as well
as in the mind as in Nature. As chance has its play in the mind, Poincaré
brings forward a theory of human creativity and genius, in the chapter
on Mathematical Discovery in "Science & Method." In this
formulation, following an intensive but more or less random input of
study, ideas appear to sort themselves out in what he calls the unconscious
mind. There follows "tout fait," the illuminating flash of
insight. This vividly recalls Kekules's epochal discovery of the benzine
ring. Poincaré elaborates on this process from his own experience; service
in the army only served to grant him a time for unconscious reflection
on a problem. Freed of military obligations, he was struck all of a
sudden with a path to a solution to his problem. Of course this epiphany
had to be paid for in the laborious working out of the happy inspiration!
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| Figure
5 |
| Marcel
Duchamp, The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even
[a.k.a. The Large Glass], 1915-23 |
In
accordance with his universal postulate of collisions producing phenomena--from
random collections of dust mites (an important Duchampian motif) to
the vast interstellar space of the Milky Way where flaming gases mingled
following principles laid down by Clerk Maxwell--all nature, including
Mind, was subject to a process in which destined outcomes proceeded
in an orderly fashion from inputs randomly fed into closed systems.
Similarly in the mind of genius, ideas, like molecules, collided and
bumped against each other. At length, the closed system of the unconscious
mind sorted out the most fruitful outcome, giving rise to a new paradigm.
This is the central theme of the Large Glass. Through an almost
"Rude Goldbergian" assortment of humorously connected devices
the "illuminating gas" arises and, becoming increasingly refined,
passes from the three dimensional realm of the Bachelors into the higher
fourth dimensional realm of the Bride. This process mirrors in contemporary
form the transmutations that the alchemists made with the array of crucibles,
furnaces, alembecs, etc.
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| Figure
6 |
Marcel
Duchamp, Dust Breeding, 1920
(Photograph by Man Ray) |
When
confronted with the suggestion he was an alchemist, Duchamp replied,
"If I have practiced alchemy it has been in the only possible way
that it can be practiced today, namely unknowingly."
The
thesis, shared by Duchamp and Poincaré, infers that any effort to place
Duchamp in any other orbit (*pun intended) than that of Poincaré is
to deny M.D.'s consistency and his basic seriousness, however concealed
by the rubric of "playful physics" or "hilarious picture."
A very serious mind has addressed the basic problem of human creativity.
In so doing, he has adopted as a model the thoughts of a leading mathematician
and physicist of his day. Without Poincaré, the Great Glass would lack
cohesion and relevance to seminal modern thought. Duchamp would have
spent so many years of thoughtful labour in vain (neglecting the dreary
months of repairing his masterwork in Katherine Dreier's garage after
it was shattered by careless handling); producing only a witty commentary
on contemporary science.
*Poincaré
was a foremost astronomer interested in the three-dimensional problem.
Without
wishing to in the least diminish Linda Henderson's monumental work,
Duchamp in Context, the writer seeks to put Duchamp in a leading
place in the history and development of science--not as an original
theoretician or as an experimentaist in any but a "thought experimentalist
mode." (Remember that Einstein's great discoveries came from the
use of imaginative "thought experiment.") The notes for the
Great Glass, in themselves, furnish an extraordinary essay in
thought experimentation. Without intensive academic training, without
a well-furnished laboratory, without consistently available help from
hired co-workers or staff, Duchamp's commentary on science has much
to do with Jarry's pataphysics.
Pataphysics,
as Jarry himself defines it, consists of, "the science of imaginary
solutions, which will examine the laws governing exceptions and will
explain the universe supplementary to this one." The writer believes
that the universe supplementary to this one could only be apprehended
from a higher dimensional standpoint, attainable solely through mathematical
insight. This would confirm that Duchamp had recourse to the brilliant
insights of Poincaré, who above all others at the time understood the
inter-dimensional tensions between the familiar third-dimensional world
and the so-called fourth, where the fourth is a spatial dimension (five
dimensions would include time). Such tensions, according to Duchamp
and Poincaré, could be resolved in the subconscious mind following an
intensive period of effort or study. (The phrase "tout faite,"
in fact, originated with Poincaré.)
Jarry's
pataphysics were propounded (posthumously) by his character Dr Faustroll.
The so-called laws of science were, according to the doctor, merely
exceptions occurring more frequently than others. This skeptical iconoclasm
gave rise to Duchamp's notion of "playful physics." Perhaps
the concept of "meta-irony" would better serve than any other
to characterize Duchamp's approach to "exact science." His
mentor Poincaré was applying a statistical, probabilistic model to descriptions
of that range of phenomena, dust mites to galactic gaseous formations,
already referred to.
The
intrusion of probabilistic consideration into exact science displaced
an earlier confidence in Determinism--followers of Newton and Laplace
Physicists, e.g. Einstein, were uncomfortable with a world in which
"God played dice." Although a fervent amateur of advanced
science, Duchamp was nevertheless capable of a gentle (and very intelligent)
mockery of that which so fascinated him.
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| Figure
7 |
| Marcel
Duchamp, Note from the Green Box, 1934 |
In
Niceron, Duchamp may have seen a quality of "hiddenness."
By this the writer refers to the use of "folded prisms and multiple
viewpoints to convey unsuspected images, lurking," as it were,
awaiting detection--as with Duchamp's 'Wilson-Lincoln effect,' Rhonda
Shearer has consistently drawn attention to the quality of 'hiddenness'
in the oeuvre of Duchamp. This is not obscurantism; although there is
a traditional linkage to the obscure language of the classical alchemists.
The
reference to the "language" of the alchemists brings up Duchamp's
fascination with language and the subtle level of meaning. Word puns,
anagrams -- the whole elusive verbal trickery of Cabalism--is common
both to Duchamp and Jarry. In a period where ciphers and codes are looked
for everywhere (affording a wealth of humorous material to comedians
and cartoonists), why waste intellectual effort on "schoolboyish"
pursuits? The answer lies in the deconstruction of language itself.
Consider the contribution of so many and so diverse intellects to this
endeavor of our time: Levi Strauss; Noam Chomsky; Moore; Ayer; Wittgenstein,
Charles Dodgson (e.g. 'Alice' -- a word means what I choose it to mean);
Roussel; Jarry; Apollinaire; etc, etc. the critical analysis of language
is a major preoccupation of our time.
If
Duchamp is much more than a very clever master of word play, it is essential
to look at the entirety of his life's work--even his period of just
"breathing!" The readymades, for example, form a continuous
commentary on the Large Glass. In fact, every note and every
artifact or "precision painting" or "tout fait"
forms part and parcel of a big "closed system." Such smaller
closed systems--mechanics; entymology (the Wasp); electo-magnetism;
eroticism; non-Euclidian geometry; chess; verbal manipulation; symbolism;
alchemy--all figure in the "compendium" / encyclopedia, as
it were, of the Large Glass and the Bride. Duchamp, from this
viewpoint, is a major philosopher of our time, on a level with Popper
Jasper, Wittgenstein, or whomever one chooses to nominate. Only his
medium is different from the strictly verbal-literary works of the forgoing.
Also, it might be added, he conveyed in an urbane and witty manner insights
made ponderous and hard to follow by the savants. Then, it might be
asked, who are the real obscurists? The writer much prefers to be amusingly
enlightened by the Large Glass than to pour over wordy and weighty
tomes, the output of scholars caring little but for the approbation
of academic peers.
Figs. 3-7
©2002 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris.
All rights reserved.
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