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The following article is published in two parts within the exhibition
catalogue for “Aftershock: The Legacy of the Readymade in Post-War and
Contemporary American Art,” Dickinson Roundell, Inc., New York, May – June 2003”
In a 1961 interview with
Katherine Kuh, Marcel Duchamp, when asked about his readymades, let
it be known that the concept behind those objects might be “the most
important single idea to come out of my work.”
In June 1967, the self-proclaimed
“an-artist”
- anticipating his final departure a mere sixteen months hence
("Quite simply, I am waiting for death") - elaborated on his
concept of the readymade: “Ultimately, it should not be looked at… It’s
not the visual aspect of the Readymade that matters, it’s simply the
fact that it exists.… Visuality is no longer a question: the Readymade
is no longer visible, so to speak. It is completely gray matter. It
is no longer retinal.” When pressed by his interviewer about the paradox
of the readymades having “ended up being ‘consumed’ in museums and exhibitions,
and sold as art objects” (particularly in light of the editions produced
by the Galleria Schwarz in Milan in 1964), Duchamp replied:
"There is an absolute contradiction, but that is what is enjoyable, isn’t it? Bringing in
the idea of contradiction, the notion of contradiction, which is something
that has never really been used, you see? And all the more since this
use doesn’t go very far. If you make an edition of eight Readymades,
like a sculpture, like a Bourdelle or you name it, that is not overdoing
it. There is something called “multiples,” that go up to hundred and
fifty, two hundred copies. Now there I do object because that’s getting
really too vulgar in a useless way, with things that could be interesting
if they were seen by fewer people. There are too many people in this
world looking. We have to reduce the number of people looking! But that’s
another matter."
To “reduce the number of people looking” echoes an early note by Marcel Duchamp, “Limit
the no. of rdymades yearly (?).”
This comment, first published in the Green Box of 1934(Fig.
1), was most likely written between 1911 and 1915, during the
period of the first readymades, such as the Bicycle Wheel (1913)
(Fig. 2) and the Bottle Dryer (1914) (Fig.
3).
As he was never keen on showing them publicly, early on they may
have functioned as works of private contemplation (not unlike Descartes’
famous piece of wax or William of Occam’s razor), responses, perhaps,
to his note of 1913: “Can one make works which are not works of ‘art’?”
Accordingly, with the
exception of one single New York exhibition in 1916, the readymades
were unknown outside his small circle of friends and family until the
1940s. We should bear in mind that even the urinal entitled Fountain
(Fig. 4) –– submitted not under Duchamp’s name, but
under the pseudonym “R. Mutt” –– was rejected for display at the first
exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists in 1917. Throughout
his life Duchamp often declined to participate in exhibitions, especially
when his readymades were involved. The Bicycle Wheel, for example,
was not shown until 1951, and even then as a replica of the lost original.
Duchamp is thus to be believed when he says that the readymades “were
a very personal experiment that I had never intended to show to the
public.”
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to enlarge |
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| Figure. 1
Marcel Duchamp, The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even (aka
the Green Box), 1934 |
Figure.
2 Marcel Duchamp, Bicycle Wheel, 1913 |
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Figure. 3 |
Figure. 4 |
Marcel Duchamp, Bottle Dryer, 1914 |
Marcel Duchamp, Fountain, 1917 |
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| Figure 5 |
Marcel Duchamp, Nude Descending a Staircase, 1912 |
As for their actual
number, Duchamp once spoke of thirty to thirty-five, though today only
about a third of them are known. Many
objects qualifying as readymades –– mentioned in his notes and in early
accounts by Charles Sheeler, William Carlos Williams, and Edgar Varèse
–– were never realized or are lost without a trace. In any case, their
limited number, and the fact that at least a few of them are unaccounted
for, strongly suggest that they were indeed the “personal experiment”
that the an-artist described. Duchamp sought from the beginning to assure
that his choice of objects would be limited in order to avoid redundancy,
an inevitable consequence if a larger number of original readymades
had been produced. In the 1930s Duchamp declined an offer from the Knoedler
Gallery in New York, whose director offered him a substantial sum if
he would continue to produce the works for which he was most famous
(such as the Nude Descending a Staircase of 1912) (Fig.
5). “It would force me to repeat myself. I will not even envisage
this possibility. I value my independence too much.”
Despite the temptation,
Duchamp kept the readymades out of the fray and, accordingly, they remained
virtually unknown.
Duchamp’s refusal
to have the readymades treated as works of art led him to claim that
“for a period of thirty years nobody talked about them and neither did
I.”
His often-pronounced aesthetic indifference towards these objects
also excluded the possibility of their appearance in large numbers,
as that would have allowed for taste to infiltrate his “experiment.”
In later years, to maintain this indifference despite their newly acquired
fame, Duchamp –– always worried about the unavoidable aesthetics of
patina –– thought of swapping them for newer mass-produced objects,
replacing, for example, the Bottle Dryer with a plastic bucket.
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| Figure
6 |
| Marcel Duchamp, Boîte-en-Valise, (open; edition started in 1941) |
Outside of his
notes in the Green Box, his private correspondence, and the miniatures
and photographic reproductions in the Boîte-en-valise (which
premiered in 1941) (Fig. 6),
Duchamp did not publicly
mention the readymades until 1945.
In fact, the sole
definition of the readymade published under Duchamp’s name, in 1938
–– “an ordinary object elevated to the dignity of a work of art by the
mere choice of an artist” –– turns out not to have written by Duchamp
but by André Breton.
All of the above
can only hint at the intricacies of Duchamp’s early concept of the readymade
and the many misreadings that followed. From the immediate post-war
period until today, Duchamp’s readymades have been all too often taken
as carte blanche for “anything goes,” mere nihilistic or iconoclastic
gestures based on the belief that, generated by the choice of the artist,
it is only the changing of the context (i.e. a urinal at a plumbing-fixture
store vs. Fountain at a gallery) through which an ordinary object
is transformed into a work of art. Misreading
Duchamp of course, is what the ambivalent an-artist himself must have
anticipated and, to a certain extent, encouraged, as Dieter Daniels
observed:
Whenever other
artists embrace the principle of the Readymade, the idea becomes completely
detached from the historical objects and begins a life of its own. In
so doing, it illustrates in the best way possible Duchamp’s dictum that
it is the viewer who makes the pictures. The continued artistic influence
of the Readymade may therefore be understood only as a permanent redefinition
of its meaning.
Duchamp’s continuing
fame, and his influence on a younger generation of artists, were unexpected:
it took some time before it was established that “this whole bloody,
revolutionary, contradictory century has basically been a big Duchampian-Beckettian
burlesque.”
His own attitude towards his heirs seemed to be, at best, one of
aloofness (of the same sort he had earlier professed towards Dada and
Surrealism), and, at worst, frustration, as was articulated to the Dadaist
Hans Richter:
This Neo-Dada,
which they call New Realism, Pop Art, Assemblage, etc., is an easy way
out, and lives on what Dada did. When I discovered the ready-mades I
sought to discourage aesthetics. In Neo-Dada they have taken my readymades
and found aesthetic beauty in them, I threw the bottle-rack and the
urinal into their faces as a challenge and now they admire them for
their aesthetic beauty.
There is a problem
with this infamous quote, however. Hans Richter asserted that it came
straight from a letter written to him by Duchamp in 1961. Only years
later did he admit that those words were not Duchamp’s. Richter had
sent Duchamp this paragraph for comment, writing: “You threw the bottle
rack and the urinal into their face…,” etc. Duchamp simply scrawled:
“Ok, ça va très bien” into the margins.
In fact, the an-artist’s
overall assessment of the new movements spreading all around him (and
to which, to a certain degree, he owed his enormous renaissance) was,
though disengaged, much more sympathetic than Richter’s misleading quote
would suggest. In 1964, Duchamp, though unmoved by Pop artists’ sense
of humor and choice of material, made the following favorable comments:
Pop Art is a return
to “conceptual” painting, virtually abandoned, except by the Surrealists,
since Courbet, in favor of retinal painting… If you take a Campbell
soup can and repeat it 50 times, you are not interested in the retinal
image. What interests you is the concept that wants to put 50 Campbell
soup cans on a canvas.
From the 1950s
on, Duchamp’s influence on the American art scene has grown precipitously.
Beginning in 1942 he lived permanently in New York, and his presence
was undoubtedly a factor in the numerous exhibitions that were held
in this country in succeeding years.
In 1952 Life
magazine honored his continuing presence as “Dada’s Daddy” in a ten-page
photo spread,
and by the mid-50s some of his readymades were permanently installed
in American museums. Robert Motherwell made a significant contribution
toward a Duchamp renaissance with the publication of the anthology The
Dada Painters and Poets (1951), in which he characterized the Bottle
Rack as at once a “sculpture” and an “anti-art and consequently
dada gesture,” concluding, “it is evident, thirty-five years later,
that the bottle rack he chose has a more beautiful form than almost
anything made, in 1914, as sculpture.”
The game was on, and
it certainly didn’t please everyone, least of all the Abstract Expressionists.
In 1957, Barnett
Newman voiced his displeasure with the Whitney Museum of American Art,
particularly with Robert Motherwell’s contribution to a catalogue for
the memorial exhibition of Bradley Walker Tomlin. In a letter to John
I. H. Baur, the Whitney’s director, Newman accused Motherwell of “smear
and slander,” stating that he wanted to “make clear that if Motherwell
wishes to make Marcel Duchamp a father, Duchamp is his father and not
mine nor that of any American painter that I respect.”
Four years earlier,
in a similar tirade against the Museum of Modern Art, he had insinuated
that Duchamp’s works in that institution merely added to its “popularizing
role of entertainment,” and asserted “that the American public… seeks
more from art than just gadgets.”
In 1952, he confirmed that the “gadgets” of his scorn were indeed
the readymades: “Marcel Duchamp tried to destroy art by pointing to
the fountain, and we now have museums that show screwdrivers and automobiles
and paintings. [The museums] have accepted this aesthetic position that
there’s no way of knowing what is what.”
This was precisely
the view of Clement Greenberg, the preeminent art critic of America’s
post-war era. Greenberg attacked the tendency to produce art without
the guidance of aesthetic judgment, a factor many artists wanted to
do away with “in the hope, periodically renewed since Marcel Duchamp
first acted on it fifty-odd years ago, that by dint of evading the reach
of taste while yet remaining in the context of art, certain kinds of
contrivances will achieve unique existence and value. So far, this hope
has proved illusory.”
With the advent of “Assemblage, Pop, Environment, Op, Kinetic,
Erotic, and all the other varieties of Novelty Art”
–– all movements, that is, which were more or less indebted to
Duchamp – Greenberg bemoaned not only the passing of Abstract Expressionism
but of “authentic art values.” These
movements were fulfillments of “Duchamp’s dream of going ‘beyond’ the
issue of artistic quality.” the “real failure of Pop art,” on top of
its “easiness,” was its “vulnerability to qualitative comparisons,”
something Duchamp had supposedly initiated in his “‘transcending’ the
difference between good and bad in general.”
It follows that at
the heart of this confusion are the readymades in their three-dimensionality,
a spatial “coordinate that art has to share with non-art.” That Greenberg saw
the readymade as belonging to the history of painting rather than to
that of sculpture clearly evolved from these observations.
On the other end
of the spectrum, it was Duchamp himself who spoke out vividly against
the movement heralded most by Greenberg:
The recent examples
of Abstract Expressionism clearly show the ultimate in the retinal approach
begun by Impressionism. By “retinal” I mean that the aesthetic pleasure
depends almost entirely on the impression on the retina, without appealing
to any auxiliary interpretation… The young artist of tomorrow will refuse
to base his work on a philosophy as over-simplified as that of the “representative
or non-representative” dilemma.
In the field of
art theory, similar opposing voices made themselves heard. To give but
one example: early on, New York’s young and infamous art critic Gene
Swenson rejected the tradition that linked everything from Cubism to
Color Field painting and instead proposed a different trajectory declaring
Dada and Surrealism the ancestors of Pop. In 1966, he curated the exhibition
“The Other Tradition” at the Philadelphia Institute of Contemporary
Art. According to the catalogue, the show’s declared goal was “1) seeing
certain twentieth-century works of art which have been overlooked or
neglected by art historians, and 2) suggesting alternative ‘intellectual’
rather than formal ways of dealing with this art.” Swenson’s checklist
is topped off by four contributions from Duchamp, leading him to ask:
“How much longer will we rest content with our defective and infectious
critical tools and our academic standards? How many more times can we
see the words ‘picture plane,’ ‘modernism,’ ‘crisis,’ new,’ and ‘literary’
without flushing?”
Swenson was reacting
to a paradigmatic shift in American art, and many young artists were
enthralled to find out that Duchamp’s newly discovered oeuvre spoke
to their own strategies of subverting what came before them. He was
simply “in the air,”
as Bruce Nauman put it. John Cage began lecturing on Duchamp at
Black Mountain College (starting in 1952) as well as at the New School
of Social Research (1956-58), to a new generation of artists that included
Robert Rauschenberg, George Brecht, Alan Kaprow, Al Hensen, Dick Higgins,
and Jackson McLow. George Segal remarked that “Marcel Duchamp had a
revived life through John Cage.”
In 1958 Rauschenberg
and Jasper Johns went to see the Duchamp collection at the Philadelphia
Museum of Art. Years before, during the War years, Joseph Cornell had
befriended Duchamp in the course of his collaboration on the latter’s
Boîte-en-valise. Yet to comprehend fully the scope of Duchamp’s
deep appreciation by post-war generation and contemporary American artists
as well as the influence he wielded over them –– especially with his
readymades –– nothing serves the purpose better than to hear it in their
own words :
Robert Motherwell
“I would say that
one of the most astonishing things in my lifetime as an artist is his
prominence. Thirty years ago, if somebody had said to me, ‘he may become
the major the major influence on the art scene,’ I’d have said: ‘You’re
out of your mind,’ and most of my judgments were quite accurate then.”
- Vivien Raynor,
“A Talk with Robert Motherwell,” Art News, vol. 73, no. 4 (April
1974). p. 51, quoted in: Dieter Daniels, “Marcel Duchamp: The Most Influential
Artist of the 20th Century?,” in: Museum Jean Tinguely Basel
(ed.) Marcel Duchamp, Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz, 2002 [exh. cat.],
pp. 37-40, pp. 25-33, p. 25.
Barnett Newman
I want particularly
to make clear that if Motherwell wishes to make Marcel Duchamp a father,
Duchamp is his father and not mine nor that of any American painter
that I respect.”
- in a letter
to John I. H. Baur, October 20, 1957, quoted in John P. O’Neill (ed.),
Barnett Newman: Selected Writings and Interviews, New York: Alfred
A. Knopf, 1990: p. 208.
George Segal
“Marcel Duchamp
had a revived life through John Cage.”
- cited by Wouter
Kotte, Marcel Duchamp als Zeitmaschine/Marcel Duchamp als Tijdmachine,
Köln, Verlag der Buchhandlung Walter König, 1987: p. 86, n. 236.
John Cage
“It is astonishing
how very much Marcel Duchamp makes others creative”
- cited by Serge
Stauffer in: Thomas Zaunschirm, Bereites Mädchen Ready-made,
Klagenfurt: Ritter, 1983, p. 10., quoted in: Marcel Duchamp: The Most
Influential Artist of the 20th Century?,” p. 27.
“Say it’s not
a Duchamp. Turn it over and it is.”
- “26 statements
Re Duchamp” (1969), in: Susan Hapgood, Neo-Dada: Redefining Art 1958-62,
New York: The American Federation of Arts, 1994 [exh. cat.], p. 137.
Nam June Paik
“Marcel Duchamp
has already done everything there is to do – except video…only through
video art can we get ahead of Marcel Duchamp.”
- interview with
Irmeline Lebeer, in: Chroniques de l’art vivant, nr. 55 (February
1974), p. 35, quoted in: “Marcel Duchamp: The Most Influential Artist
of the 20th Century?,” p. 27.
Robert Morris
“The Readymades
are traditionally iconic art objects”
- “Notes on Sculpture
4: Beyond Objects” (1969), in: Charles Harrison and Paul Wood (eds.),
Art in Theory: 1900-1990. An Anthology of Changing Ideas, Oxford
and Cambridge, MA: 1992, vol. 2, p. 872, quoted in: “Marcel Duchamp:
The Most Influential Artist of the 20th Century?,” p. 30.
Joseph Kosuth
“The event that
made conceivable the realization that it was possible to ‘speak another
language’ and still make sense in art was Marcel Duchamp’s first unassisted
Readymade. With the unassisted Readymade, art changed its focus from
the form of the language to what was being said…This change – one from
‘appearance’ to ‘conception’ – was the beginning of ‘modern’ art and
the beginning of conceptual art. All art (after Duchamp) is conceptual
(in nature) because art only exists conceptually.”
- “Art after Philosophy”
(1969), in: Art in Theory: 1900-1990. An Anthology of Changing Ideas,
p. 844, quoted in: “Marcel Duchamp: The Most Influential Artist of the
20th Century?,” p. 30.
Allan Kaprow
“[Duchamp] deliberately
stopped making art objects in favor of little (ready-made) hints to
the effect that you could pick up art anywhere you wanted. In other
words, he implied that the whole business of art is quite arbitrary”
- “Interview with
Allan Kaprow,” Allan Kaprow, Pasadena: Pasadena Art Museum, 1967
[exh. cat.], p. 8, quoted in: John Tancock, “The Influence of Marcel
Duchamp,” in: Anne d’Harnoncourt and Kynaston McShine (eds.), Marcel
Duchamp. A Retrospective Exhibition, Philadelphia: Philadelphia
Museum of Art, 1973 [exh. cat.], pp. 160-178, p. 171.
“His readymades…
are radically useful contributions to the current art scene. If a snow
shovel becomes a work of art by simply calling it that, so is all of
New York, so is the Vietnam war, so is a pedantic article on Marcel
Duchamp… The Readymade is a paradigm of the way humans make and unmake
culture. Better than ‘straight’ philosophy and social science, a good
Readymade can ‘embody’ the ironic limits of the traditional theory that
says reality is nothing but a projection of mind or minds. ”
- “Doctor MD”,
in: “A Collective Portrait of Marcel Duchamp,” quoted in: Anne d’Harnoncourt
and Kynaston McShine (eds.), Marcel Duchamp. A Retrospective Exhibition,
Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1973 [exh. cat.], pp. 204-205,
p. 205.
“I think we all
learned from… Duchamp. A key feature was discreetness, a timing and
a restraint that many of us didn’t learn well enough. Duchamp was personally
very helpful to us, no question… both practically and intellectually.”
- interview with
Susan Hapgood, quoted in: Neo-Dada: Redefining Art 1958-62, p.
116.
Vito Acconci
“Did this film
[Conversions of 1971] record a process parallel to the multivalence
between Marcel Duchamp and Rrose Sélavy? ”
“Yes. ”
- interview with
Robert Pincus Witten, "Vito Acconci and the Conceptual Performance,"
in Artforum, vol. 10, nr. 8 (April 1972), p. 49, quoted in: John Tancock,
“The Influence of Marcel Duchamp,” p. 178.
William T.
Wiley
“What we can learn
from Marcel Duchamp is the same message from any artist who has made
his presence manifest in the form of personal achievement: is essentially
that we do not have to follow his example. Yet should we find in his
example a path that interests us we should trust ourselves enough to
follow that path as long as it is possible without an overabundance
of human misery”
- “Thoughts on
Marcel Duchamp,” in: Brenda Richardson, Wizdumb: William T. Wiley,
Berkeley: University Art Museum, 1971, p. 42, quoted in: “The Influence
of Marcel Duchamp,” p. 173.
Paul Pfeiffer
“Somewhere I read
a statement by Duchamp to the effect that his art was intended as a
destroyer, specifically of identity. I find that really inspiring. Putting
a mustache on Mona Lisa makes a pretty basic point about the fluidity
of identity and the depths to which gender, race and nationality are
encoded into vision. I’m interested in multiple meanings and a kind
of ambiguity that frustrates any attempt to pin it down.”
- Linda Yablonsky,
“Making Microart that can Suggest Macrotruths,” in: The New York
Times, December 9, 2001, p. 39.
Richard Pettibone
“My response to
Duchamp hasn’t changed at all in the last 34 years. His work is just
as beautiful. Being a visual artist I feel that it’s very important
what things look like & in spite of all that talk about chance &
giving up taste, etc. Duchamp’s work is still drop dead gorgeous.”
- letter to Francis
M. Naumann, August 1997, quoted in: Francis M. Naumann, Apropos of
Marcel. The Art of Making Art after Duchamp in the Age of Mechanical
Reproduction, New York: Curt Marcus Gallery, 1999 [exh. cat.], p.
13.
Sanford Biggers
“Duchamp’s readymades
are now aesthetically and formally pleasing, though they were controversial
for their time and opposed the conventions... I also follow the idea
of keeping the form as one of the most important elements but also feel
strongly about challenging prescribed notions in art theory. The
fact that I am the creator or author of these pieces also adds to how
these pieces are interpreted by art theory.”
- Lauren Wilcox,
“ Transformation and Tradition: Interview with Sanford Biggers,” in:
Tout-Fait: The Marcel Duchamp Studies Online Journal, vol. 2,
nr. 4, Art & Literature (January 2002)
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Elaine
Sturtevant
“[Duchamp’s] concern
with trying to redefine what we consider art was a very big factor in
terms of my own work.”
- Francis M. Naumann,
Apropos of Marcel. The Art of Making Art after Duchamp in the Age
of Mechanical Reproduction, New York: Curt Marcus Gallery, 1999
[exh. cat.], p. 22.
Claes Oldenburg
“[Duchamp] was
certainly on the scene. But I believe that the sort of thing I was into,
which really was about the very gritty aspects of the Lower East Side,
was very remote from Duchamp.”
- interview with
Susan Hapgood, in: Neo-Dada: Redefining Art 1958-62, p. 124.
“Yes, he was a
historical figure.”
- interview with
Benjamin H. D. Buchloh (1985), quoted in: Martha Buskirk and Mignon
Nixon (eds.), The Duchamp Effect. Essays, Interviews, Round Table.
Cambridge, MA: MIT/October, 1996, pp. 33-36, p. 33. [(originally published
as “Three Conversations in 1985: Claes Oldenburg, Andy Warhol, Robert
Morris,” in: October 70 (Fall 1994).]
George Brecht
“The difference
between a chair by Duchamp and one of my chairs could be that Duchamp’s
chair is on a pedestal and mine can still be used.”
- Henry Martin,
An Introduction to George Brecht’s Book on the Tumbler on Fire, Milan:
Multhipla Edizioni, 1978, p. 71, quoted in: Neo-Dada: Redefining
Art 1958-62, p. 27.
“I read somewhere,
quite a while ago, that an interviewer asked: “How does it feel now,
Mr. Duchamp, that everyone knows your name?” And Duchamp answered, “My
grocer doesn’t.”
- “Notes on the
Inevitable Relationship GB-MD (If there is one)” (1973), quoted in:
Anthony Hill (ed.), Duchamp: Passim. A Marcel Duchamp Anthology,
Langhorne, PA: G+B Arts International, 1994, p. 167.
Andy Warhol
“Well, yeah, we
saw him a lot, a little bit. He was around. I didn’t know he was that
famous or anything.”
- interview with
Benjamin H. D. Buchloh (1985), in: The Duchamp Effect. Essays, Interviews,
Round Table., pp. 37-45, p. 37.
Jasper Johns
“Duchamp’s wit
and high common sense (“Limit the no. of rdymades yearly”), the mind
slapping at thoughtless values (“Use a Rembrandt as an ironing board”),
his brilliantly inventive questioning of visual, mental and verbal focus
and order (the beautiful Wilson-Lincoln system, which was never added
to the glass; ‘lose the possibility of identifying … 2 colors, 2 laces,
2 hats, 2 forms’; the vision of an alphabet ‘only suitable for the description
of this picture’) inform and brighten the whole of [the Green Box].”
- “The Green Box,”
Scrap (December 23, 1960), p. 4, in: Joseph Masheck (ed.), Marcel
Duchamp in Perspective, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1975,
p. 111.
“Marcel Duchamp,
one of this century’s pioneer artists, moved his work through the retinal
boundaries which had been established which had been established with
Impressionism into a field where language, thought and vision act upon
another.… The art community feels Duchamp’s presence and his absence.
He has changed the condition of being here.”
- “Marcel Duchamp
(1887-1968),” Artforum, vol. VII, nr. 3 (November 1968), p. 6,
in: Marcel Duchamp in Perspective, 1975, p. 147.
“The ready-made
was moved mentally and, later, physically into a place previously occupied
by the work of art.”
- quoted in Wouter
Kotte, Marcel Duchamp als Zeitmaschine/Marcel Duchamp als Tijdmachine,
Köln: Verlag der Buchhandlung Walter König, 1987, p. 84 (footnote 203).
Donald Judd
“Duchamp invented
several fires but unfortunately didn’t bother with them.… The work Duchamp
does have is of course highly interesting, but it’s a mistake not to
have developed it. His work and his historical importance are different
things. It’s to other people’s credit to have developed his or related
ideas… The roto-reliefs and the ready-mades and assisted ready-mades
are fine.”
- “Marcel Duchamp
and/or Rrose Sélavy,” Arts Magazine, vol. XXXIX, nr. 6 (March
1965), pp. 53-54, in: Marcel Duchamp in Perspective, p. 121.
Robert Smithson
“I see Duchamp
as a kind of priest of a certain sort. He was turning a urinal into
a baptismal front… In other words, a Readymade doesn’t offer any kind
of engagement. Once again it is the alienated relic of our modern postindustrial
society. But he is just using manufactured goods, transforming them
into gold and mystifying them.
- Moira Roth,
“Robert Smithson, an Interview”, Artforum, vol. XII, nr. 2 (October
1973), p. 47, in: Marcel Duchamp in Perspective, pp. 134-137,
p. 136.
William N. Copley
“If Marcel Duchamp
ever died, his phoenix Rrose Sélavy lifted herself from the remains
of the past that the former had desecrated by putting an ink-moustache
on the Mona Lisa, thus creating a present for himself and all of us
in which nouns like ‘art’ and ‘poetry’ melt into a single word.”
- “Art is not
Furniture”, in: Alfred M. Fischer and Dieter Daniels (eds.), Übrigens
Sterben Immer die Anderen. Marcel Duchamp und die Avantgarde seit 1950,
Köln: Museum Ludwig, 1987 [exh. cat.], p. 283 (translated from the German).
Mike Bidlo
“Many artists
have spent significant energies exploring his legacy”
- The Fountain
Drawings, Zurich/New York: Bischofberger/Shafrazi, 1998 [exh. cat.],
p. 54.
Joseph Cornell
“I believe that
surrealism has healthier possibilities than have been developed. The
constructions of Marcel Duchamp who the surrealists themselves acknowledge
bear out this thought, I believe.”
- letter to Alfred
Barr, 13 November 1936, quoted in: Anne Temkin, “Habitat for a Dossier,”
in: Polly Koch (ed.), Joseph Cornell/Marcel Duchamp…in resonance,
Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz, 1999 [exh. cat.], pp. 79-93, p. 87.
Robert Rauschenberg
“[Duchamp’s] recognition
of the lack of art in art and the artfulness of everything, I think,
is probably his most important contribution.”
- transcribed
from the film Rebel Ready-Made: Marcel Duchamp (BBC, June 23,
1966), quoted in: Francis M. Naumann, Marcel Duchamp. The Art of
Making Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, New York: Abrams,
1999, p. 294.
“Marcel Duchamp
is all but impossible to write about. Anything you may say about him
is at the same time untrue, but when I think of him I get a sweet taste
in my body.”
- “A Collective
Portrait of Marcel Duchamp,” p. 217.
Yoko Ono
“drink an orange juice laced with
sunshine and spring and you’ll see Duchamp.”
- “A Collective Portrait of Marcel Duchamp,” p. 215.
Jason Rhoades
“Duchamp
for me is like L. Ron Hubbard. He’s a slippery figure who keeps popping
up.”
- Russell Ferguson,
“Given: 1. The Caprice, 2. The Ferrari,” in: Parkett, No. 58 (2000),
pp. 122-125, p. 123.
Hannah Wilke
“To honor Duchamp
is to oppose him… The issue that remains, was Duchamp trying to control
his own death by killing art while he was still alive – aesthetic impotence
for the sake of survival… Objecting to art as commodity is an honorable
occupation that most women find it impossible to afford. Is this ready
maid, having collected many of the readymades now in Oldenburg’s Ray
Gun Wing owned by Peter Ludwig, owed an equal share for her part
in the collaboration? Could commodities but speak, they would say; Our
use, value may be a thing that interests men… In the eyes of each other
we are nothing but exchange values.”
- “I Object. Memoirs
of a Sugar Giver”, in: Übrigens Sterben Immer die Anderen. Marcel
Duchamp und die Avantgarde seit 1950, pp. 263-271, pp. 269,270.
Arakawa &
Madeline Gins
Managing to position
objects to hold their own in relation to that which ubiquitously
happens along and even to redirect it, using very-adjusted and less-adjusted
ready-made insertions into symbolizing power, an inchoate emanating-out
ready-made in its own right, to convey and express enough and
more than enough, M. D. changed the history of expression (read symbolizing)
and redefined (artistic) purpose -- two remarkable achievements.
- e-mail to the
author, February 7, 2003.
Ed Ruscha
“If [Duchamp]
hadn’t come along, we would have needed to invent him.”
- interview with
Robert L. Pincus, October 30, 1990, in: Robert L. Pincus,” ‘Quality
Material…’: Duchamp Disseminated in the Sixties and Seventies,” in:
Bonnie Clearwater (ed.), West Coast Duchamp, Miami Beach: Grassfield
Press, 1991, pp. 87-101, p. 100.
“What do you think
is Duchamp’s most significant contribution?”
“That he discovered
common objects and showed you could make art out of them.”
- interview with
Elizabeth Armstrong, June 17, 1994, in: The Duchamp Effect. Essays,
Interviews, Round Table., pp. 55-56, p. 55.
Bruce Connor
“I still feel
that he dealt with enigmas and arbitrariness in the world with a sharp
analytical mind.”
- interview with
Elizabeth Armstrong, June 9, 1994, in: The Duchamp Effect. Essays,
Interviews, Round Table., pp. 57-59, p. 57.
Vija Celmins
“I was greatly
influenced by Duchamp, if only indirectly, by questioning what painting
is – and should be.”
- interview with
Robert L. Pincus, March 26, 1991, in: ‘Quality Material…’: Duchamp Disseminated
in the Sixties and Seventies,” p. 88.
Sherrie Levine
“I was very surprised
when I saw my first Fountain. When I made the decision to cast the urinal,
I was thinking primarily about Duchamp, but the finished high polish
bronze sculpture more readily evoked Brancusi.”
- interview with
Martha Buskirk, May 13, 1994, in: The Duchamp Effect. Essays, Interviews,
Round Table., pp. 177- 181, p. 179.
Louise Lawler
“[T]o me, Duchamp
signaled a ‘bottle rack’ (who uses that?), a weird looking urinal,
and a lot of pictures of him smoking and enjoying the sun with other
people.…]n fact, all the readymades are interesting-looking things now,
and their normalcy is gone. …This discussion of Duchamp seems a good
opportunity to express my discomfort with too much referencing of authority
that is restrictive, rather than enjoying the work’s ‘kindling’ effect
and use.”
- interview with
Martha Buskirk, May 20, 1994, in: The Duchamp Effect. Essays, Interviews,
Round Table., pp. 183- 186, pp. 183, 186.
“Duchamp’s fetishization
gets on my nerves.”
- e-mail to the
author, February 2, 2003
Chris Burden
“He was definitely
a formative figure for me… In an age of Cal Arts and Jeff Koons, Duchamp
is a different role model”
- interview with
Robert L. Pincus, September 26, 1990, in: “ ‘Quality Material…’: Duchamp
Disseminated in the Sixties and Seventies,” pp. 98, 100.
John Baldessari
“There is a serious
unseriousness going on… I see a kinship there, I feel I understand what
[Duchamp’s] about.”
-interview with
Moira Roth, January 6, 1973, in: ‘Quality Material…’: Duchamp Disseminated
in the Sixties and Seventies,” p. 88.
Clyfford Still
“Few men could better
exemplify the antithesis of my work than Marcel Duchamp.”
- “Letter to the
Editor,” Artforum (February 1964), quoted in Calvin Tomkins,
Duchamp. A Biography, New York: Henry Holt, 1996, p. 438.
William de
Kooning
“And then there
is that one-man movement, Marcel Duchamp – for me a truly modern movement
because it implies that each artist can do what he thinks he ought to
– a movement for each person and open for everybody.—”
- “What Abstract
Art Means to Me,” Museum of Modern Art Bulletin, vol. 18, nr.
3 (June 1951), p. 7.
Shigeko Kubota
“Are we dancing
still on the gigantic palm of Duchamp, thinking it is a big continent
and ocean?”
- “Twenty Questions
About My Work,” quoted in: Zdenek Felix (ed.), Shigeko Kubota. Video
Sculptures, 1981 [exh. cat.], p. 51.
Jeff Koons
“You can look
at Marcel Duchamp… Everything comes back to the ability of the artist
to be able to communicate, to focus.
- “Jeff Koons.
I have my finger on the eternal,” interview with Andrew Renton, in:
Flash Art, vol. XXIII, nr. 153 (Summer 1990), pp. 110-115, quoted
in: Thomas Zaunschirm, Kunst als Sündenfall. Die Tabuverletzungen
des Jeff Koons, Freiburg: Rombach, 1996, pp. 7-20, p. 16.
“My process of
distancing myself from subjective art continued through the late ‘70’s,
which included exposure to Marcel Duchamp. He seemed the total opposite
of the subjective art I had been immersed in. It was the most objective
statement possible, the readymade. I loved that aspect and started doing
my first inflatables.”
- interview with
Alan Jones, in: Temaceleste, nr. 88 (November/December 2001),
pp. 34-39, p. 36.
Bruce Naumann
“The kind of questions
important to Duchamp were absorbed and circulated. Many people dealt
with them and thought about them. In this regard he certainly was an
influence.”
- interview with
Lorraine Sciarra (1972), quoted in: Christine Hoffmann (ed.), Bruce
Nauman. Interviews 1967-1988, Amsterdam: Verlag der Kunst, 1966,
pp. 66-87, p. 69 (translated from the German).
“He leads to everybody
and nobody”
- “A Collective
Portrait of Marcel Duchamp,” p. 211.
It is obvious
what Barry Schwabsky meant when he reviewed the Arturo Schwarz’s revised
edition of The Complete Works of Marcel Duchamp in 2001: “Duchamp’s
work is so deeply encoded in the fabric of contemporary art that I’m
tempted to keep this book not with other art monographs, but on the
ready-reference shelf next to Roget, Bartlett, and Merriam-Webster:
Duchamp is to a great extent, our vocabulary.”
The an-artist quickly
had become the Über-father par excellence, creating an anxiety
of influence some felt was too overpowering.
Particularly within
the American context.
Duchamp’s significance
as originating father is generally seen to be identical to the significance
of the readymades in relation to postmodernism. As paternal, theological
origin, Duchamp is the readymades and the “readymades Duchamp” comes
to signify postmodernism.… Duchamp has become a powerful authorizing
function by which works produced by contemporary artists claim nepotistic
validation as begotten by the Duchampian seed.
Today, with the
concept of irony co-opted and empty gestures of shocking for shock’s
sake
held in high regard (with no one within the art world ever offended),
many artistic strategies add up to nothing more than a “conformity of
refusal.”
Could it be that the readymade – just one decade short of its 100th
birthday – is finally losing its disruptive potential?
Maybe so, if its concept is only interpreted as an excuse for “anything
goes” or the mere provocative gesture declaring anything to be art via
a change of context. Duchamp himself had already noticed as much when
he allowed his readymades to be turned into an edition precisely at
that moment in the early 1960s when they had become celebrated icons
and art-world commodities. Nowadays, it is not enough simply to appropriate
formally the an-artist’s work. Every artist borrowing Duchamp’s highly
charged visual vocabulary walks a fine line between creating a token
pastiche (an art-world inside joke based solely on recognizing affinities)
and intellectually engaging the ideas surrounding the work.
Duchamp –– except
for his fleeting fame at the Armory Show of 1913, caused by the succès
de scandale of the Nude Descending a Staircase–– had the
luxury of being unrecognized as a major artistic force until he had
reached his sixties. Left to himself, far away from the spotlight and
thus from any system’s intricacies of interdependence, he could proclaim
himself to be nothing but a “breather,” being mostly (and somewhat wrongfully)
known for having abandoned all artistic activity from the mid-20’s on.
Besides his many artist friends and a few wealthy patrons, Duchamp lived
completely detached from the art world as we know it. He carefully kept
himself independent, seeing to it personally that his works would end
up grouped together with a few collectors and museums. Later in life,
Duchamp thought the contemporary art market responsible for the impossibility
of young artists truly to concentrate on what they were doing. He came
to lament the perpetually increasing tide of attention, of dealers,
galleries, collectors, critics, and exhibitions, turning art into an
“over-developed exoteric”:
By that I mean
that the general public accepts and demands too much from art, far too
much from art; that the general public today seeks aesthetic satisfaction
wrapped up in a set of material and speculative values and is drawing
artistic output towards an enormous dilution.
This enormous dilution,
losing in quality what it gains in quantity, is accompanied by a leveling
down of present taste and its immediate result will be to shroud the
near future in mediocrity.
In conclusion,
I hope that this mediocrity, conditioned by too many factors foreign
to art per se, will this time bring a revolution on the ascetic
level, of which the general public will not even be aware and which
only a few initiates will develop on the fringe of a world blinded by
economic fireworks. The great artist of tomorrow will go underground.
Underground, the
artist would examine whole new ways of expression to subvert the overall
status quo of the art world in all of its wide-ranging aspects. In a
1922 survey by Alfred Stieglitz regarding the status of photography
as a form of art, Duchamp had answered: “You know exactly how I feel
about photography. I would like to see it make people despise painting
until something else will make photography unbearable. There we are.”
Today, installation and video art are ever on the rise, figurative
painting yet again en vogue (with often surprising results),
and the idea of a single work of art often substituted for the impact
of a whole group of them or an environment. More than ever, artists
“on the fringe” (geographically and ethnically) make themselves heard.
As a critique of biotechnology,
some artists are using new materials such as DNA, treating the body
as a readymade.
| click
to enlarge |
 |
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| Figure
8 |
| Marcel Duchamp, Étant Donnés(inside
and outside view), 1946-1966 |
It remains to be
seen how these strategies will eventually play out. An interesting aspect
pertaining to Duchamp’s oeuvre is a renewed interest in his last major
work, Given: 1. The Waterfall, 2. The Illuminating Gas (1946-1966)
(Fig. 8), Étant Donnés for short. in a recent interview,
Björk, Iceland’s Queen of Pop, declaring Duchamp a “genius,” expressing
awe for the Étant Donnés: “And then he created an artwork, when
he was already very old, when everyone thought he’d already be over
with, and this artwork changed completely the 20th century.” For
the New York photographer Gregory Crewdson, “it’s extraordinarily photographic,
to the point of looking through an aperture at a frozen moment in time.
It’s everything I want from an art piece. It’s haunting, mysterious,
troubling, beautiful, heightened, disturbing.”
Looking through two peepholes drilled at eyelevel into a massive
wooden door in a separate room at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the
viewer becomes aware of a 3-D multimedia assemblage depicting the partly
hidden body of nude woman (with a prominently displayed, shaved vulva)
lying on a bed of twigs and clutching a gas burner in front of a trompe
l’oeil landscape with a running waterfall and clouds made of cotton.
Duchamp had secretly worked on Étant Donnés for twenty years.
It was revealed only after his death in the summer of 1969.
After seeing the an-artist’s last work, Hannah Wilke, another artist
greatly inspired by him, asked: “Did Dr. Duchamp (MD) disguise with
dignity or despair the destruction, degeneration, and denigration of
the maimed model of mortality – Mother?”
Since Socrates, asking
questions often proves more beneficial and generates more creative energy
than trying to provide that one right answer. Duchamp himself was not
always right, of course. In 1961, for example, he predicted that “in
five or six years, no one would talk about [the readymade] anymore.” Throughout
his late interviews in the sixties, he often pointed out that he was
mostly interested in an audience fifty or a hundred years hence. Thirty-five
years after his death, that audience is ever-growing.
Notes
* Parts of this essay were presented as a lecture entitled “Marcel Duchamp, Stephen Jay Gould and the End of ‘Anything Goes’,” on 15
June 2002, on the occasion of a symposium held during the run of
a Duchamp exhibition at the Museum Jean Tinguely, Basel, Switzerland.
I thank Francis M. Naumann for suggesting the title, drawing my
attention to various sources and providing copies of some articles
while my Duchamp library was being shipped from New York to Munich.
[1] Katharine Kuh, The Artist’s Voice: Talks with
Seventeen Artists, New York, Harper & Row, 1962: p. 92.
[2] In a 1959 interview, Duchamp coined the sobriquet "an-artist"
for himself, a pun on anarchist - while dismissing the term
"anti-artist" as someone who would depend on his opposite
too much in order to exist (and would thus still be as much of an
artist as the one without the prefix "anti-"); from an
an interview with George Heard Hamilton and Richard Hamilton, "Marcel
Duchamp Speaks," BBC - Third Program (series: Art,
Anti-Art, ca. October 1959); issued as an audio tape by William
Furlong (ed.), Audio Arts Magazine, vol. 2, nr. 4, 1976 (London).
I thank André Gervais for providing me with the source of Duchamp's
first mention of "an-artist."
[3] “Marcel Duchamp Talking about Readymades” (Interview by
Phillipe Collin, 21 June 1967), in Museum Jean Tinguely, Basel (ed.),
Marcel Duchamp, Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz, 2002 [exh. cat.]:
pp. 37-40.
[4] Michel Sanouillet and Elmer Peterson (eds.), The Writings
of Marcel Duchamp, New York, Da Capo, 1989, p. 33.
[5] In his Marcel Duchamp. The Art of Making Art in the
Age of Mechanical Reproduction (New York, Abrams, 1999) Francis
M. Naumann differentiates between “assisted readymade,” “imitated
rectified readymade,” “ printed readymade,” “ readymade (or ready-made),”
“ rectified readymade,” and “semi-readymade” (pp. 308-309), not
to mention the “reciprocal readymade,” as discussed in one of Duchamp’s
notes in his Green Box: “Use a Rembrandt as an Ironing Board,”
(in The Writings of Marcel Duchamp, p. 32), a remark that
may well have inspired Robert Rauschenberg to do his Erased de
Kooning (1953) and Jasper Johns to use Duchamp’s small bronze
Female Fig Leaf for a surface imprint (albeit almost undetectable)
on his painting No (1961). Throughout this essay, I concern
myself with the “unassisted readymade.”
[6] Naumann 1999, p. 74.
[7] Anonymous, “Artist Marcel Duchamp Visits U-classes, Exhibits
at Walker,” Minnesota Daily, 22 October 1965.
[8] Dieter Daniels, Duchamp und die Anderen. Der Modelfall
einer künstlerischen Wirkungsgeschichte in der Moderne, Köln:
DuMont, 1992, p. 205.
[9] Duchamp, cited in Arturo Schwarz, The Complete Works
of Marcel Duchamp, New York: Delano Greenidge, 2000, p. 68.
[10] “Marcel Duchamp Talking about Readymades,” interview with
collin, 1967, p. 40.
[11] Werner Spies, Max Ernst, Collagen, Köln:
1988, p. 23.
[12] It has been argued that only with their documentation
within the Boîte -en-Valise did Duchamp take the significant
step of both defining the readymades as a clearly defined group
of works (deciding which ones he would include when starting to
work on the Boîte around 1936) and placing them within the
context of art (Duchamp und die Anderen. Der Modelfall einer
künstlerischen Wirkungsgeschichte in der Moderne, p. 217).
[13] Hector Obalk, “The Unfindable Readymade,” in: Tout-Fait:
The Marcel Duchamp Studies Online Journal, vol. 1, no. 2, (Articles)
[14] Hector Obalk, “The Unfindable Readymade,” (as confirmed
by André Gervais).
[15] George Dickie, Art and
the Aesthetic. An Institutional Analysis, Ithaca and London,
Cornell UP, 1974: pp. 38-39.
[16] Dieter Daniels, “Marcel Duchamp: The Most Influential
Artist of the 20th Century?,” in Museum Jean Tinguely
Basel (ed.), Marcel Duchamp: p. 29.
[17] Brooks Adams “Like Smoke: A Duchampian Legacy,” in: Christos
M. Joachemides and Norman Rosenthal, eds., The Age of Modernism.
Art in the 20th Century, Ostfildern: Hatje, 1997
[exh. cat.], p. 321. In this regard, see also Pontus Hulten’s remark
(in Pontus Hulten, ed., Marcel Duchamp, Milano: Bompiani,
1993 [exh. cat.], p. 19): “ If, in 1953, somebody had said that
forty years later [Duchamp’s] work would be considered more important
than Picasso’s, that person would have been looked on as a madman.
Et pourtant…”
[18] Duchamp, in Hans Richter, Dada: Art and Anti-Art,
New York, McGraw Hill, 1965: pp. 207-208.
[19] Hans Richter, Begegnungen von Dada bis Heute, Köln,
DuMont: pp. 155ff.
[20] Rosalind Constable, “New York’s Avant-garde, and How It
Got There,” cited in Jennifer Gough-Cooper and Jacques Caumont,
“Ephemerides on and about Marcel Duchamp and Rrose Sélavy, 1887-1968,”
in Pontus Hulten, ed., Marcel Duchamp, Cambridge, MIT Press,
1993, entry for May 17, 1964.
[21] Among the important shows of Duchamp’s work in the late
40s and early 50s were those at the Sidney Janis Gallery, the Rose
Fried Gallery, and the Julien Levy Gallery, New York, as well as
various exhibitions at the Yale University Art Gallery. Peggy Guggenheim’s
Art of this Century was already displaying his works in the early
40s, and in 1957, the Guggenheim Museum launched a major travel
exhibition of the three Duchamp brothers, entitled “Jacques Villon,
Raymond Duchamp-Villon, Marcel Duchamp.”
[22] Sargeant Winthrop, “Dada’s Daddy: A New Tribute is Paid
to Duchamp, Pioneer of Nonsense and Nihilism,” in: Life,
vol. 32, no. 17 ( 28 March 1952): pp. 100-110.
[23] Robert Motherwell, ed., The Dada Painters and Poets.
An Anthology, Cambridge: Belknap/Harvard University Press, 1989:
xxiii. Other significant English-language publications on Duchamp
before 1960 include Marcel Duchamp: From the Green Box (New
Haven, The Readymade Press, 1957; 25 notes translated by George
Heard Hamilton and published in an edition of 400), Robert Lebel’s
widely available monograph Marcel Duchamp (New York, Grove
Press, 1959), and Richard Hamilton’s typographic version of all
of the Green Box notes in The Bride Stripped Bare by her
Bachelors, Even (London and Bradford, Percy Lund, Humphries
& Co., and New York, George Wittenborn, 1960).
[24] Newman, in John P. O’Neill (ed.), Barnett Newman: Selected
Writings and Interviews, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1990: p.
208.
[25] Newman, in O’Neill 1990: p. 39.
[26] Newman, in O’Neill 1990: p, 247. Newman went on to suggest
that MoMA should “put on an exhibition of machine guns.” It bears
notice that in September 1999, when the New York gallery owner Mary
Boone presented Tom Sach’s “Haute Bricolage,” in which firearm paraphernalia
were displayed and 9-millimeter bullets were placed in a bowl for
visitors to take home, she was briefly arrested by the police for
the illegal distribution of live ammunition.
[27] Greenberg, “Avant-Garde Attitudes: New Art in the Sixties,”
in John O’Brian, ed., Clement Greenberg: The Collected Essays
and Criticism, vol. 4., Chicago and London: The University of
Chicago Press, 1993, p. 293.
[28] Clement Greenberg, “Recentness of Sculpture,” in O’Brian
1993, p. 252.
[29] Donald B. Kuspit, Clement Greenberg: Art Critic,
Madison: The university of Wisconsin Press, 1979, p. 114.
[30] Greenberg, “Avant-Garde Attitudes: New Art in the Sixties,”
in O’Brian 1993: pp. 301-2.
[31] Clement Greenberg, “Recentness of Sculpture,” in O’Brian
1993: p. 254.
[32] See Thierry de Duve, Clement Greenberg: Between the
Lines, Paris: Dis Voir, 1996 as well as his Résonances du
Readymade, Nîmes 1989, p. 132 (referred to in Dieter Daniels,
“Marcel Duchamp: The Most Influential Artist of the 20th
Century?,” p. 31.)
[33] Marcel Duchamp, “Where Do We
Go From Here?,” address to a symposium at the Philadelphia Museum
College of Art, March 1961, in Anthony Hill, ed., Duchamp: Passim.
A Marcel Duchamp Anthology, Langhorne, PA: G+B Arts International,
1994, p. 89. Duchamp seems to have had an unfavorable opinion of
Abstract Expressionism’s major player, Jackson Pollock. According
to Thomas B. Hess, Duchamp “complained” to him that Pollock “still
uses paint, and we finished that… [Pollock] never will enter the
Pantheon!” (Hess, “J’accuse Marcel Duchamp,” in Joseph Masheck,
ed., Marcel Duchamp in Perspective, Englewood Cliffs, Prentice-Hall,
1975: p. 120). Duchamp had declared painting dead with his last
oil on canvas, Tu m’ from 1918. In regard to Pollock, there
is yet another anecdote worth telling: In 1945, Peggy Guggenheim
called in Duchamp and David Hare to deal with a crisis involving
a twenty-foot-long mural by Pollock. The mural was too long for
the space it had been commissioned to fill, in the entrance hall
of Guggenheim's apartment. Duchamp coolly advised cutting eight
inches off one end. According to Hare, “Duchamp said that in this
type of painting it wasn't needed” (Calvin Tomkins, Duchamp:
A Biography, New York, Henry Holt, 1996: p. 362).
[34] Scott Rothkopf, “Banned and Determined,” in Artforum,
vol. 40, no. 10 (Summer 2002): p. 144.
[35] John Tancock, “The Influence of Marcel Duchamp,” in Anne
d’Harnoncourt and Kynaston McShine, eds., Marcel Duchamp. A Retrospective
Exhibition [exh. cat.], Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1973: p.
174.
[36] Segal, cited in Wouter Kotte, Marcel Duchamp als Zeitmaschine/Marcel
Duchamp als Tijdmachine, Köln, Verlag der Buchhandlung Walter
König, 1987: p. 86, n. 236.
| click
to enlarge |
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| Figure
7 |
| Marcel
Duchamp, The Bride Stripped Bare by her Bachelors,
Even (a.k.a. the Large Glass), 1915-23 |
[37]
Marcel Duchamp’s influence was not limited to the acknowledgment
of his readymades. His The Bride Stripped Bare by her
Bachelor’s, Even (a.k.a. the Large Glass, 1915-23)
(Fig. 7) proved equally inspiring to many artists. As
this exhibition focuses on the impact of the readymades on the post-war
and contemporary American art scene, his influence on European artists
since the 1940s is not discussed (from Arman, Gianfranco Baruchello,
Joseph Beuys, Guillaume Bijl, Marcel Broodthaers, Hans Haacke, Richard
Hamilton, Thomas Hirschhorn, Ilya Kabakov, Martin Kippenberger,
Piero Manzoni, Sigmar Polke, Gerhard Richter, Daniel Spoerri, André
Thomkins, Jean Tinguely and Ben Vautier to the “Young British Artists,”
many artists come to mind - and those, of course, of other parts
of the world). A more complete list of quotations by post-war American
artists would also include statements from Bill Anastasi, Michael
Asher, John Armleder, Richard Artschwager, Matthew Barney, Jim Dine,
Mark Dion, Brian O’Doherty, Robert Gober, Al Henson, Eva Hesse,
Dick Higgins, Ray Johnson, Mike Kelley, Ellsworth Kelly, Edward
Kienholz, Alison Knowles, Barbara Kruger, Les Levine, Roy Lichtenstein,
Glenn Ligon, George Maciunas, Walter de Maria, Allan McCollum, Paul
McCarthy, Tony Oursler, Richard Prince, Charles Ray, Larry Rivers,
James Rosenquist, Andres Serrano, Cindy Sherman, Kiki Smith, Haim
Steinbach, Paul Thek, Wayne Thiebaud, Robert Watts, Tom Wesselman,
Emmett Williams, Fred Wilson, and Christopher Wool. In a recent
statement, Laurence Weiner – believing that his answer would come
to late to be acknowledged in the survey – denied any influence
Duchamp might have had on his work: "I seemed to have missed
the deadline, which is as close to being Duchampian as I hope I'll
ever be" (fax to the author, February 3, 2003). Jeanne-Claude,
speaking for Christo, also saw no connection between her husband's
work and Duchamp: "When he showed his Bicycle Wheel, he did
not do anything to it. With Christo it is the opposite, starting
with his early works in the 50's." (telephone conversation
with the author, February 1, 2003). One should keep in mind that
the Duchamp effect is not only limited to the visual arts. He has
inspired many works of literature, and – starting with John Cage
– many minds of the music world (among them Merce Cunningham, David
Bowie, Bryan Ferry, Grant Hart, REM, Beck, and Björk).
[38] Schwabsky, in “Coffee Table: Barry Schwabsky and Andy
Grundberg on Art and Photography,” Bookforum, vol. 8,
no. 2 (Winter 2001): p. 42.
[39] Regarding Duchamp’s overpowering influence, three
examples come to mind: Joseph Beuys’ 1964 performance Das
Schweigen des Marcel Duchamp wird überbewertet (The Silence
of Duchamp is Overrated) and Vivre et laisser mourir
ou la mort tragique de Marcel Duchamp (To Live and Let
Die or the Tragic Death of Marcel Duchamp), also of 1964,
a series of eight canvases by Gilles Aillaud, Eduardo Arroyo,
and Antonin Recalati. More recently, Peter Saul painted Pooping
on Duchamp (1996).
[40] Amelia Jones, Postmodernism and the En-gendering
of Marcel Duchamp, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press,
1994, pp. 8, 14.
[41] On the issue of Duchamp and concepts of taste and
disgust, see the argument between Jean Clair, “Duchamp at the Turn of the Centuries” (a translated excerpt from his Marcel Duchamp et la fin de l’art, Paris: Gallimard, 2000), in:
Tout-Fait: The Marcel Duchamp Studies Online Journal,
vol. 1, no. 3 (Winter 2000), News, and Arthur C. Danto, “Marcel Duchamp and the End of Taste: A
Defense of Contemporary Art,” in: Tout-Fait: The Marcel Duchamp
Studies Online Journal, vol. 1, nr. 3 (Winter 2000), News,
[42] I have borrowed the phrase from the title of an article
by Peter Bürger, “Der Konformismus der Verweigerung. Anmerkungen
zur Neo-Neo-Avantgarde,” in: Texte zur Kunst, vol. 12,
no. 48 (December 2002): p. 165.
[43]
Since 1997, the artist Rhonda Roland Shearer and her husband,
the late Stephen Jay Gould, have raised havoc, at least within
the discipline of art history, by arguing that Duchamp did not
select his objects, but fabricated them himself, or altered
early studio photographs depicting the original readymades,
now mostly lost, see the transcriptions of their conference
Methods of Understanding in Art and Science: The Case of
Duchamp and Poincaré, November 5-7, 1999 and Rhonda Roland
Shearer, “Why the Hatrack is and/or is not Readymade,”
Tout-Fait: The Marcel Duchamp Studies Online Journal,
vol. 1, nr. 3, Multimedia (December 2000).
Their hypotheses seem to revive some of the readymade's upsetting
possibilities.
[44] “Where Do We Go From Here?” (1961), in: Duchamp:
Passim. A Marcel Duchamp Anthology, p. 89.
[45] The Writings of Marcel Duchamp, p. 165; originally
published in Manuscripts, No. 4 (New York, December,
1922).
[46] For a scathing examination of the contemporary art
world’s mechanisms (while holding up the figure of Duchamp as
an important predecessor), see Bedri Baykam, Paint and the
Post-Duchamp Crisis. The Fight of a Cultural Guerilla for the
Rights of Non-Western Artists and the Empty World of the Neo-Ready-Mades,
Istanbul: Literatür, 1994. An excerpt follows: “The West, which
is moving anyway more and more into the ‘multi-cultural art
world,’ behaves as if it was doing a favor to the East and South.
This is definitely wrong and no ‘favor’ is needed. In fact they
are only starting to pay the interest of years of constipation
and prejudiced blockheadedness. They are also trying to bring
a fresh breath to their once again bored art world, which is
sinking in an unspoken crisis generated paradoxically by the
ever-growing importance of Marcel Duchamp, provoking lost generations
working on pastiche ideas” (p. 212); “At this moment,
Marcel Duchamp’s timeless, a-national, ambiguous, ready-mades
and concepts, interpretable in 1000 different ways, come as
handy and as opportune as water in the desert, although in its
new variations the humor and witty sarcasm of Marcel, of course,
is not present” (p. 303).
[47] Björk, from an interview Thomas Venter, in “Der Look
Passiert Nicht,” Süddeutsche Zeitung, 27 August 2001
(translated from the German).
[48] Dodie Kazanjin, “Gregory Crewdson. Twilight Zone,”
Vogue (May 2002): p. 300.
[49]The appearance of the Etant Donnés after Duchamp’s
death came as a complete surprise to most, contrary to many
later accounts. John Canaday, reviewing the work for The
New York Times, wrote that it was “very interesting, but
nothing new, ” just “an entertaining invention that has arrived
a bit late to make a sensation.… For the first time, this cleverest
of 20th-century masters looks a bit retardaire. Edward
Kienholz, as the major specific example, has gone so far beyond
the spent and sterile slickness of this final Duchamp work that
he makes Duchamp look like Bouguereau” (“Philadelphia Museum
Shows Final Duchamp Work,” in The New York Times, July
7, 1969. Warhol, in 1971, is the first artist on record to be
inspired by Duchamp’s last work, while contemplating an idea
for a gallery show consisting only of binoculars with which
the visitors would have to find the actress/artist Brigid Polka
performing in the window of a faraway building: “It also has
to do with the same thing Duchamp was doing [in Etant
Donnés], looking through a box [sic]. Sex...in the window...Oh,
that would be nutty. That’s just the kind of thing you’d want
to see with binoculars-some perversion, right? Somebody jerking
off. Brigid could be the art. She could stand in the window.”
(David Bourdon, Warhol, New York: Abrams, 1989, pp. 315-316;
the quotation is from a telephone conversation between Bourdon
and Andy Warhol in June 1971. I thank Ms. Yona Backer for drawing
this source to my attention).
[50] “I Object. Memoirs of a Sugar Giver”, in: Übrigens
Sterben Immer die Anderen. Marcel Duchamp und die Avantgarde
seit 1950: p. 270.
[51] “Marcel Duchamp Talking About Readymades,” p. 40.
Fig. 8
©2003 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris.
All rights reserved.
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