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Figure 1 |
| Julien Levy Gallery's Exhibition Announcement for Through the Big End of the Opera Glass, 1943 |
In 1943, Marcel Duchamp was asked by the gallery owner Julien Levy to
design the announcement for an exhibition to be called “Through the Big
End of the Opera Glass.” As the title implies (adapted, as it was, from
Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking Glass), the show was to feature unusually
small-scale work. Years later, Levy explained that the idea for the exhibition
came from having seen an example of Duchamp’s valise, in which
the artist had packed miniature reproductions of his work into a portable
suitcase. The show was to include not only work by Duchamp, but by two
other artists as well: the French Surrealist painter Yves Tanguy, and the
American collage and assemblage artist, Joseph Cornell. Within the
announcement (Fig. 1), Duchamp reproduced a black-and-white layout by
Cornell featuring the titles of Cornell’s work printed in a variety of expressive
type faces surrounded by a collage of images referring to them, while
Tanguy was represented by a drawing of one of his characteristically biomorphic
three-dimensional shapes, accompanied, in this particular
instance, by an opaque black shadow that curiously overlaps it.
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Figure 2 |
Marcel Duchamp, Cupid, Collection of the Honorable Joseph P. Carroll |
For his own contribution, on the back cover of the announcement
Duchamp provided the image of a cupid with a stretched bow and arrow
in his hands, but the figure is inexplicably reproduced upside down, for the
artist’s signature—which is oriented legibly—streams off to one side at
the level of the cupid’s head. At first glance, knowing that Duchamp often
appropriated imagery for whatever purpose was required—in the fashion
of culling images readymade—one might easily conclude
that the cupid was clipped from some printed
source and collaged into this position. However, the
original layout for this announcement was recently discovered
among the effects of Julien Levy, and it is now
known that Duchamp painstakingly drew the cupid
himself in pen and ink (Fig. 2). It is likely that he took
the time to render this image because he could not find
the reproduction of a cupid fixing his arrow in this precise
direction, a detail that, as we shall soon learn, is
critical to his intent, for the significance of the cupid’s
aim can only be understood when the announcement is
unfolded and fully opened.
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Figure 3 |
Detail of Julien Levy Gallery's Exhibition Announcement for Through the Big End of the Opera Glass, 1943 |
The paper stock Duchamp selected for this
ephemeral publication was a translucent sheet folded
in quadrants, forming a booklet. The first thing the recipient would have seen upon
removing the announcement from its
envelope was the title page, providing
the name of the exhibition, its
dates and its location. Upon opening
the booklet, he would find Cornell’s
layout opposite Tanguy’s drawing,
and, on the back cover, Duchamp’s
cupid. Closer examination of the
cupid would reveal that something is
printed on the opposite side of the
paper: below Duchamp’s signature,
in red ink, one can faintly read the
words: “White to Play and Win”
(Fig. 3). To chess enthusiasts, this
phrase can mean only one thing: one
is being presented with a chess problem to solve in which white is instructed
to move first and eventually go on to win the game. Indeed, just above
it, one can discern the faint outline of a chess board with pieces in various
positions, printed, like the writing below it, on the opposite side of the
sheet. If, at this point, someone is compelled to unfold the sheet and examine
the opposite side, Duchamp provided additional instructions: “Look
through from other side against light.”
For those already familiar with Duchamp’s work, these words might
well bring to mind the elaborate title that he gave to a work on glass from
1918: To Be Looked at (from the Other Side of the Glass) with One Eye,
Close to, for Almost an Hour (The Museum of Modern Art, New York). The
comparison may not have been a simple coincidence of wording, for if an
attempt were made to solve the chess problem, even grand masters would
likely need more than an hour to solve it. If we follow Duchamp’s instructions
and “look through from the other side against light,” we will see the
layout of a chessboard from the proper position (with a white square in the
lower right corner), each player with a king, a pair of pawns, and a single
rook. We will also see the cupid he drew on the other side, the arrow from
its bow pointing down the white knight’s file (or “B” file in algebraic notation),
suggesting that the next best possible move for White would be to
advance its pawn. One who studies this endgame problem at any length,
however, would determine that this move would not attain a win for white.
Indeed, virtually any move by white seems to result in a draw, even though
there are a few compelling scenarios that—until properly analyzed—give
the false impression that white has a chance to win (see analysis in boxed
insert).
AN ANALYSIS OF DUCHAMP’S ENDGAME PROBLEM
AN EXCHANGE WITH LARRY EVANS
At first glance, the endgame chess problem that
Duchamp devised (see Diagram A) gives the
impression that White could play and win, for
White has a pawn on the seventh rank and a
quick promotion would seem inevitable. Black
has two isolated pawns that could also advance,
but they are farther from promotion and look as
though they could easily be attacked by White’s
rook. The following scenario seems plausible, as
was suggested to me thirty years ago by international
grandmaster Larry Evans:
| |
White |
Black |
| 1. |
Ke4! |
h4 |
| 2. |
Kd5 |
h3 |
| 3. |
Kc6 |
h2 |
| 4. |
Rg7+ |
Kf3 |
| 5. |
Rh7 |
Kg2 |
| 6. |
Kc7 |
Rxb7+ |
| 7. |
Kxb7 |
h1=Q |
| 8. |
Rxh1 |
Kxh1 |
| 9. |
Kc6 |
f5 |
| 10. |
Kd5 and wins |
(see Diagram B) |
| |
|
|
|
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Diagram C |
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Diagram D |
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Diagram E |
This variation, however, misses a possible move
for Black, one that would not only extend play,
but would eventually result in a draw. After the
white king moves to c7 (the sixth move), the
pieces are in the position and shown in Diagram
C.
At this point, Black is forced to move his rook
(otherwise, the white king will capture it on its
next move). If he captures the white pawn and
checks white’s king at the same time, the result
will be a win for White (as Evans demonstrated
above). But if Black moves his rook to g8 (6.
… Rg8), he is in a far better position. There, if
White promotes on the next move, he can capture
the promoted piece (as indicated in
Diagram D).
On the very next move, the white king will
capture the black rook. The white rook will
then capture the black pawn when it promotes,
and the black king will, in turn, take the white
rook, leaving a pair of kings and isolated pawns
on each side of the board, a position that results
in a draw.
There is another scenario that would allow
White to continue play even further. After 6.
… Rg8, if White does not promote his pawn on
the 7th move, but, rather, advances his other
pawn one square forward (7. b6, in the direction
indicated by the Cupid’s arrow), play
would continue as follows:
| 7. |
... |
h1=Q |
| 8. |
Rxh1 |
Kxh1 |
| 9. |
b8=Q |
Rxb8 |
| 10. |
Kxb8 |
f5 draws |
|
|
In this position, it may appear that White will
win, since his pawn seems closer to promotion.
When played out, however, this leads to
Diagram G (discussed below), resulting in
another book draw. A number of other possible
scenarios were later suggested by Larry Evans.
In the initial position, he strongly encouraged
investigation of moving the white king to e3, or advancing the trailing pawn to b6 (as suggested
in Duchamp’s design by the direction of the
Cupid’s arrow). This latter suggestion (1. b6)
eventually transposes to Diagram E. Following
the strategy that I had proposed—of Black
moving his rook to g8—Evans also suggested
that White promote right away on b8, followed
by a black rook capture (thereby eliminating
White’s pawn that was threatening to promote).
White’s king would then capture the
black rook on b8, followed by the promotion of
Black’s pawn, which would, in turn, be captured
by the white rook. The black king would
then capture the white rook, leaving the position
found in Diagram F. If we compare the
final positions in Diagrams E and F, we discover
that they are very similar and transpose into
each other. They both lead to Diagram G,
which ends in a classic draw (as explained
below). In position F only, the white pawn
would queen, leaving the black king protecting
a pawn that is about to promote (see Diagram
G). The position leads to perpetual check, or
stalemate.
The way a stalemate is achieved (from
Diagram G) is that White starts a series of
checks leading to the following position: White
Kc7, Qg4 (check); Black: Kg2, f2. Then after …
Kh1, Qf3+ Kg1, Qg3+, Black does not protect
his pawn with … Kf1 (because then the white
King steps back up the board, followed by a
series of checks and King moves again, leading
to eventual mating position), but instead plays
… Kh1! Then if the white Queen takes the
pawn with Qxf2, it is a stalemate; but meanwhile,
Black is threatening to promote. So
White has to give perpetual check or allow
stalemate. |
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Figure 4 |
Black & White photograph of Larry Evans playing chess with Marcel Duchamp (Larry Evans is on the left and Marcel Duchamp is on the right) |
Larry Evans—who had played chess with
Duchamp on more than one occasion (Fig.
4)—was sufficiently intrigued by this problem
that he graciously accepted my request
to publish it in his monthly column in Chess
Life & Review. At the time, I offered a $15
reward for its solution, not realizing that I
would be inundated with responses, a number
of which came from prison inmates who
demanded immediate payment of the
reward. Phone calls from several of these
individuals were all the intimidation I needed
to send checks, even though none of their
solutions were actually convincing. The
most thoughtful and detailed responses
came from regular readers of Chess Life & Review, specialists in endgame strategy who
proposed a variety of intriguing possibilities, all hoping that theirs was the ultimate solution
(although I do not believe that any of them actually were). I have since subjected
this problem to the most powerful computer programs available to me, and no solution
has yet been found. I am now all the more convinced that this is a problem that cannot
be solved. Duchamp has given us, in effect, a problem with no solution.
I. In an effort to solve this problem, I wrote to E. B. Edmondson, then executive director of the
American Chess Federation. He passed on my inquiry to Larry Evans, who responded to me in a letter
dated June 2, 1976.
II. I presented these alternatives to Mr. Evans in a letter dated June 4, 1976.
III. Letter from Evans to the author, June 5, 1976.
IV. The analysis of this final position was generously provided by Allan G. Savage, author of
Reconciling Chess: a Marcel Duchamp Sampler (Davenport: Thinkers’ Press, 1998), and who is in the
process of writing the fourth volume of the series published by Moravian Chess, The Chess Biography
of Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968), which is scheduled for publication in 2008.
V. “Larry Evans on Chess,” Chess Life & Review (October 1976), p. 580.
VI. I have provided copies of the present analysis to several experienced chess players: Jennifer
Shahade, Ralph Kaminsky, Allen G. Savage and Malcolm H. Wiener. These individuals are familiar
with standard chess analyses and, although they agree with my general conclusion (that the problem
has no solution), they believe my analysis to be redundant and—in comparison to professional analyses—
somewhat amateurish. Nevertheless, I am grateful to all of them for having taken the time to
review my text, and for having provided various recommendations for its improvement.
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The rigor and intensity of this endgame problem stands in sharp contrast
to the means by which Duchamp presents us with a hint of its solution: a
cupid aiming his arrow toward the ground (or into the sky, if we consider
that the cupid is presented upside-down). Cupid is, of course, the mythological
god of love, and his arrow is usually aimed in the direction of an
amorous target; a direct hit can cause the recipient to fall deeply and
blindly in love. Knowing this, and knowing that when Duchamp designed
this brochure he had recently met and fallen in love with Maria Martins—
a Brazilian sculptor, married with three children, and in almost every
respect, unattainable—one is tempted to speculate that Duchamp might
have had a personal situation in mind when he decided that a cupid should
indicate the path to follow in pursuing a solution to this vexing problem.
Duchamp was well known for having said: “There is no solution, because
there is no problem.” In the end, the problem that he faced with Maria
Martins was insurmountable, demonstrating that in both chess and life—
and perhaps in art as well—there are, indeed, problems without solutions.
Notes
This article first appeared in The Sienese Shredder no. 1 (Winter 2006-2007), pp. 180-87. At the time when it appeared, I was unaware
of the fact that Grandmaster Pal Benko had published an analysis of this same endgame problem, concluding—as I did—that there was no solution
(see "Duchamp Solved!?," Chess Life [August 2005], p.588). I am grateful to Ralph Kaminsky for having drawn this article to my attention.
1.
The date of this exhibition has been given variously, as either 1943 or 1948. Julien Levy
consistently gave the date as 1943 (see his autobiography, Memoir of an Art Gallery [New
York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1977], p. 309, as well as the reference contained in the following
note). For reasons that are unclear, however, in all editions of his otherwise reliable
catalogue raisonné of work by Marcel Duchamp, Arturo Schwarz gives the date as 1948
(see The Complete Works of Marcel Duchamp [New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1969], cat.
no. 329, page 523; revised and expanded edition [New York: Delano Greenidge Editions,
1997], cat. no. 530, p. 793, and descriptive bibliography 71, page 904). The date of 1943
cannot be challenged, however, for the show was reviewed in The New York Times on
December 12, 1943 (I am grateful to Ingrid Shaffner for bringing this citation to my
attention).
2.
See the statement provided by Julien Levy for a brochure published on the occasion of
“Through the Big End of the Opera Glass II,” a recreation of the original 1943 show at
the Joan Washburn Gallery, New York, February 15 -March 12, 1977 (the brochure contained
a facsimile reprint of the original fold-out catalogue).
3.
This comment seems to have been quoted for the first time in Harriet and Sidney Janis,
“Marcel Duchamp: Anti-Artist,” View, series V, no. 1 (March 1945), p. 24; it is repeated
again in Winthrop Sargeant, “Dada’s Daddy,” Life, vol. 32, no. 17 (April 28, 1952), p. 111.
Fig. 1-3, © 2008 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris.
Authorization to publish this article was provided by the author, Francis M. Naumann and The Sienese Shredder.