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Green Box with
94 Items
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Museum of Modern Art Lab
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In 1934, Marcel Duchamp announced the publication of
his Green Box (edition of 320 copies) in a subscription bulletin
-- an enormous undertaking since each box contains 94 individual items mostly
supposed "facsimiles" (Duchamp's word) of notes first written between 1911
and 1915, each printed and torn upon templates to match the borders of the
scribbled originals for a total of 30,080 scraps and pages.
(See illustrations 1A & 1B for The Bride Stripped
Bare by her Bachelors, Even in deluxe and regular editions; illustration
1C for the Subscription Bulletin advertising the Green Box
in 1934; and illustration 1D for Duchamp's master work a.k.a. The Large
Glass (1915-23) of the same title as the Green Box.) Spectators,
according to Duchamp, needed to study this "Sears Roebuck-like catalogue"
of notes in order to understand his major life's work, The Large Glass
(also known by the same title as the Green Box: The Bride
Stripped Bare by her Bachelors, Even).
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Illustration
1A
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Illustration
1B
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Illustration
1C
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Illustration
1D
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp,
ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Calvin Tomkins, Duchamp's biographer, in 1996 writes:
Duchamp had always maintained that his Glass
was not just something to be looked at but "an accumulation of ideas,"
in which verbal elements were at least as important as visual ones, perhaps
even more so. [...] As Duchamp would say in a 1959 interview, he had "tried
in that big Glass to find a completely personal and new means of expression;
the final product was to be a wedding of mental and visual reactions;
in other words, the ideas in the Glass were more important than the actual
visual realization." Since the ideas were contained (more or less) in
the notes, their long-delayed publication would become a new chapter in
the continuing saga of his unfinished, shattered, but far from defunct
masterpiece.
Duchamp famously boasted -- and the
claim has been repeated, mantra-like, in nearly all commentary and scholarship
upon Duchamp -- that he had exerted enormous, almost maniacal, effort
to reproduce the notes exactly, down to details of paper and ink.
He told Michel Sanouillet in 1954, for example:
I wanted to reproduce them as accurately
as possible. So I had all of these thoughts lithographed in the same ink
which had been used for the originals. To find paper that was exactly
the same, I had to ransack the most unlikely nooks and crannies of Paris.
Then we cut out three hundred copies of each lithograph with the help
of zinc patterns that I had cut out on the outlines of the original papers.
Scholars have accepted Duchamp's claims
at face value, uncritically adopting Duchamp's given words as a premise
in their own "analysis." For example, Calvin Tomkins refers to Duchamp's
"absolute fidelity to the physical appearance" of his Green Box Notes
as "puzzling" since they were based upon abstract ideas.
Elizabeth Cowling writes in 1997; "Duchamp adopted the most time consuming
and meticulous methods, scouring the specialist suppliers in Paris for
papers that were exactly like those on which he had originally made his
notes, and for lithographic inks of exactly the same color as the inks,
etc. he had used."
And David Joselit writes in 1998: "Duchamp took extraordinary pains to
mass-produce what is generally assumed to be unique or original -- the
artist's cognitive process. It was not enough to publish transcripts of
his texts. Rather he sought to reproduce as precisely as possible each
torn piece of paper, each different ink, so that every one of the proposed
three hundred editions of the Green Box would appear to share the
spontaneity, the immediacy of the original process -- as though he had
undertaken to mass-produce his own subjectivity discovered readymade."
Let us leave aside for now (and for later and more extensive
commentary) the deliciously ironic issue of why conventional scholarship
on a man so celebrated for tweaking and mocking conventionality should
be so willing to accept the subject's own statements about his intentions
and procedures as a kind of holy writ -- and not suspect that Duchamp
might also have played games by preying upon their gullibility and hagiographical
tendencies as well. In any case, we merely wish to point out here that
Duchamp, manifestly and purposefully, did not proceed as advertised in
compiling the Green Box -- and that scholars have not thought to
check his claims, even though the material for so doing (comparison of
the original and reproduced notes) has always been available.
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Illustration
2A
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Illustration 2B
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS,
N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Illustration
3A
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Illustration
3B
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Most of the original notes remained with Duchamp and
were not accessible to scholars during his life. But they then passed to
his estate, and thence to the Centre Georges Pompidou (Paris), where they
are now freely available for scholarly study. Moreover, and more importantly,
a substantial group of these notes have always been potentially available
to researchers -- and comparisons between the originals and the Green
Box so-called facsimiles could always have been made, although none
ever were. Duchamp produced a special edition of 20 deluxe boxes (out of
the total edition of 320), each containing one original note, along with
93 reproductions.
Several
owners of the 20 Deluxe Green Boxes sold the original notes (contained
within them) separately, and Shearer was able to procure one of the original
notes.
Shearer's note discusses a long, complex and important
statement about the malic molds and sieves in the bachelor half of The
Large Glass. (See illustrations 2A & 2B, Shearer's original note and
the Green Box reproduction.) She noticed immediately that neither
the ink nor the paper of the original note matched the reproductions in
two copies of the Green Box. The original is written in black ink,
but the Green Box versions use blue ink in the lithographic reproduction.
(see illustrations 3A
& 3B which compare the original note's textured paper and the reproduction's
paper) The original paper is thin, textured and warm in tone. The Green
Box reproduction's paper is much thicker, bluish in tone and smooth.
If Duchamp "wanted to reproduce [the notes] as exactly as possible," why
would he replicate other Green Box notes with paper similar in
texture to Shearer's original note, but then not use this same paper in
reproducing Shearer's note?
(See illustration 3C showing example of Green Box note with
texture.)
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Illustration
3C
© 1999 Succession
Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Shearer and Gould then consulted Margaret Holben Ellis
at the New York University Institute of Fine Arts, and Christopher McGlinchey
and Erika Mosier at the Museum of Modern Art Conservation to learn if the
difference in ink color could have resulted from a natural change through
time from Duchamp's original. Christopher McGlinchey, from his chemical
analysis, identified the ink in the original note as lamp black and in the
reproduction as Prussian blue. McGilnchey assures us that the lampblack
ink in the original note was not ever blue (as used in the reproduction),
and that the inks are truly different.
See illustrations 3A & 3B showing detail of Prussian blue ink in the Green
Box copy and lamp black ink in the original note.) Moreover, the wove
paper used by Duchamp in the Green Box could not represent the closest
likeness available after scouring all the stores of Paris, because machine-laid
paper much more similar (if not identical) to Duchamp's original can still
be easily obtained and was surely available when Duchamp made the Green
Box.
(After all, he used machine-laid paper in other Green Box note reproductions.)
Clearly, Duchamp intentionally altered both ink and paper to depart
from the originals in his "facsimile" copies despite his claims, beginning
in 1934, for faithful reproduction.
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Illustration
5A
© 1999 Succession
Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Illustration 5B
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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We then checked further to discover whether
these alterations are systematic throughout the Green Box, or merely
incidental in a few notes. Shearer and Gould examined 22 original notes
at the Pompidou Center and we now wish to present this preliminary report.
We feel confident in stating, at this early stage of our investigation,
that the differences are pervasive and systematic. Every one of the 22
notes we examined shows substantial difference between the original and
the Green Box "copies." On every note, Duchamp uses complex combinations
of different papers and different inks in making the Green Box
versions.
Moreover, lest one think that Duchamp may simply have
done the best he could with materials available, and that the differences
represent "sins of omission" rather than "sins of commission" we can report
conclusively that at least some of the changes were done with clear intent
- for Duchamp's own instructions remain in the original notes to prove
the point. On the back of several one-sided notes, he wrote an instruction
for the printer: tel recto seul - that is, "same size, right side
only." But two notes of the 22 we examined bear the "smoking gun" inscription:
Ag 1/4 recto seul -- that is, "enlarge by 1.25, right side only."
(See illustrations 5A & 5B, two of the notes which Duchamp selected to
enlarge in reproductions.) The Green Box versions of these two
notes are, indeed, 1.25 times larger than the originals.
Among further typical alterations in the 22 notes
we find: the original note "laws, principles, phenomena" is written in
blue ink but the Green Box version is printed in black ink, a reverse
combination when compared to Duchamp's alterations of Shearer's original
note -- in black ink but "duplicated" in blue ink. In another case, he
reproduced the "1912" note on graph paper with a square pattern whereas
the original was on graph paper with a rectangular pattern. However, in
the "chute d'éau" note, the original is not on graph paper, yet
the Green Box version is printed on square patterned graph paper.
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Illustration
6A
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Illustration
6B
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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We
strongly suspect that the differences between originals and Green Box
versions are systematic rather than capricious -- they are surely pervasive
in any case -- and we shall be studying all the available notes in an
attempt to understand the system. But, for now and in closing, we wish
to report one other remarkable fact.
Duchamp's wry and false claims that he worked so hard
in scouring Paris for the right inks and papers covers up an enormously
greater (and genuine) expenditure of time that he completely failed to stress!
We first learned about this remarkable feature of Duchamp's production when
Margaret Ellis noted a pin prick through a period in both Green Box
versions that we used for this study-- but no pinprick in the original.(See
illustrations 6A & 6B, showing original note without pin prick and reproduction
with pin prick.) This led us to suspect that the pinprick probably anchored
a stencil that Duchamp had used to produce part of the Green Box
version.
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Illustration
6C
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Indeed, our study of several notes reveals that, although
Duchamp always reproduced the background text by lithography when he added
the words and phrases in red or blue highlight (often as they appear on
the originals) he used pochoir stencils (a method he openly discussed and
employed for promoting both his Boîte en Valise (1934-41)and his
< Eau et Gaz Box (1958)even featuring his inclusion of the
actual pochoir stencils in his grand deluxe versions). (See illustration
6C for Duchamp's Boîte; see illustration 7A for Duchamp posing
with Lebel holding "pochoir stencils" sold with the grand deluxe Eau
et Gaz and illustration 7B for pochoir stencil included in the grand
deluxe version of Eau et Gaz.) Moreover, and more remarkably, he
used two or more stencils for one color on some of the notes (to secure
overlayerings as occurs in handwriting), even though the entire text of
one color could have been reproduced with a single stencil. (See illustrations
8A & 8B comparing his use of two stencils for red showing overlap -- similar
to the results of handwriting -- versus his use of one stencil for red.
See also illustrations 8C & 8D which show the irregular texture of collotype
lithography in one of Duchamp's Green Box notes versus the smooth
surface from a stencil that often shows varied pooling along edges upon
close inspection.)
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Illustration
7A
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Illustration
8A
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Illustration
8B
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Illustration
7B
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Illustration
8C
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Illustration
8D
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Just consider
the immense amount of work required to reproduce 320 copies of most of
the 94 items in varied combinations of inks and papers that depart from
the originals, often one at a time using multiple stencils. For example,
Ellis and Mosier have assured us that Duchamp, as a printer with two years
of professional training, would have known that he could have achieved
far greater exactness in reproduction, and saved a great deal of money
and even more time in what can only be regarded as meticulous and uninspiring
work, by reproducing the red and blue highlights lithographically. Did
he use this laborious method of stenciling to introduce inevitable and
slight differences among the 320 boxes -- differences that a careful observer
could use to spot his methods, and to discover the inconsistencies between
his actions and his explanations? Or does the hand stenciling create enough
small, perceivable differences between each copy (and its original document)
to force us to ask whether we encounter here a new category and strategy
of reproduction -- not a true "facsimile" ("to make similar") but now
a "facvarious" ("to make different"). This man never ceases to surprise
us -- and to instruct us about our foibles and assumptions.
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Illustration 9
© 1999 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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The "original plates [...] used in printing the
manuscript notes for the Green Box" (as depicted in entry no.
436 in The Arturo Schwarz Duchamp Catalogue Raisonné [1998])are
not printing plates according to Ellis and Mosier. We checked to see
if these plates could have been the templates used by Duchamp to tear
the edges of each reproduction in order to mimic the tears of the
originals. Of the 23 plates only a few have the complete shape of
the original note -- the others would not work as successful templates
for tearing the reproductions because they are, at best, only partial
fragments of the entire original note's total edge boundary. (See
illustration 9 of the alleged "original printing plates" for the Green
Box.) |
1.
The following text is from the 1934 Subscription Bulletin:
300 exemplaries numérotés et signés d'un recueil de feuillets manuscrits,
dessins et peintures (années 1911 à 1915) ayant servi à la composition
du
LA MARIÉE MISE A NU PAR SES CÉLIBATAIRES, MÊME
par Marcel Duchamp
Les notes manuscrites, en fac-simile rehaussé de crayon rouge et bleu,
les
dessins et peintures reproduits en phototypie (une planche en couleurs)
sont
imprimés sur papiers divers et réunis dans un emboîtage de 33 cm x 28
cm.
prix de l'exemplaire franco de port: France 120 francs / Étranger 150
francs
Edition Rrose Sélavy
18 rue de la Paix
Paris
Il a été tiré 20 exemplaires (dont 10 hors commerce), signés et numérotés,
sur papiers de luxe; chacune des boîtes contient, outre la reproduction
en couleurs, des photographies originales et une page de manuscrit.
prix de l'exemplaire franco de port: 750 francs.
-
Bulletin de Souscription
Veuillez m'adresser
....................... exemplaires
de la boîte contenant les fac-simile et reproductions en couleurs de notes
manuscrites, dessins, peintures ayant servi à la composition de
LA MARIÉE MISE A NU PAR SES CÉLIBATAIRES, MÊME
par Marcel Duchamp
2.
Calvin Tomkins, Duchamp (New York: Henry Holt, 1996), 296.
3.
In Marcel Duchamp's 1st Catalogue Raisonné designed by Duchamp
himself in 1959 -- Henri Pierre Roché, Duchamp's close friend and sometime
partner and collaborator writes about the Green Box notes: "These
are exact replicas of each document with the original colors of the inks
and pencils that he used. The textures and shapes of paper are identical
with the originals even in the case of scraps and torn pieces where metal
masks were used." Robert Lebel, Marcel Duchamp (New York: Grove
Press, 1959). 81.
4.
Calvin Tomkins, Duchamp, 296.
5.
Ibid.
6.
Elizabeth Cowling in the exhibition catalogue Surrealism and After:
The Gabrielle Keiller Collection (Edinburg, 1997), 161.
7.
David Joselit, Infinite Regress: Marcel Duchamp 1910-1941 (Cambridge:
MIT Press, 1998), 85.
8.
This particular note is recognized by experts as an authentic Green
Box note original.
9.
This particular note is recognized by experts as an authentic Green
Box note original.
10.
Ellis, Mosier, and McGilnchey identified the papers as wove and machine-
laid.
11.
For an English translation of the Green Box Notes, see Hamilton
and Hamilton, The Bride Stripped Bare by her Bachelor, Even (New
York: Percy Lund, Humphries and Co. Ltd, 1960).
12.
This particular note is recognized by experts as an authentic Green
Box note original.
13.
See Hamilton for Green Box Notes.
14.
Duchamp was known for his formal interest in chance systems. For example,
Duchamp and his two sisters created a musical score (also included in
the Green Box) with a system of randomly selected notes.
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