Tom Girst, Editor in Chief:
Have been greatly enjoying latest issue of Tout
Fait, after noting not once, but twice you brought attention to
Duchamp's 1964 Readymades edition. In the Barns interview it was surrounded
by the usual dismay this edition brings, fair enough. Then, in the
corespondence with Hirschhorn you appeared to have taken a decidedly
heavy hand in reference to this edition, using it as a form of entrapment
to elicit a responce from Hirschhorn in regards to his own recent
works potential "commercial" value. It was to Hirschhorn's
credit that he did not "trip" on this edition or reference
it to his own works, but he clearly rebuked any notion that Duchamp
ever compromised his own works, Bravo, Hirschhorn. I believe I can
shed some light around the "dismay" of this Duchamp/Schwarz
venture. First, in the Barnes interview he preferences his concern
by stating that at least in regards to Etant donnés
the work appears "to flesh out the Bride" placing it full
cycle in relation to the Large Glass. The very same
statement can be said of the Ready-mades edition, as usual with Duchamp
the "shock" is hidden in plain sight. The answer, Dear Tom,
is in the exact number of the editions "8".
Does this number ring any bells? As Etant Donnés
belongs to the realm of the Bride, so the Ready-mades belong
to the realm of the Bachelors. Return to the notes in the Green
Box, where Marcel lets us know that the Bachelors were conceived
as a game of 8!, only changed to 9 with the addition of himself, a
reluctant station master (in an non-autobiographic way as possible).
As reluctant as the "lost" original Ready-made brings the
number 8 to 9! In fact seen from this angle the Ready-mades appear
as a collective form of "portraiture", a sort of Bachelors
composite (although non-auto, you understand). Keep up the great work.
Sincerely,
John Mcnamara
mac2u22@hotmail.com