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Figure 1 |
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| Figure 2 |
Duchamp's most fervent
biographers, Jacques Caumont and Jennifer Gough-Cooper, tell us that
Duchamp was in New York City on 22 December 1944 and that, on this
day, he met up with Frederick Kiesler in the afternoon for a discussion
about a forthcoming issue of View magazine. This issue was
going to be dedicated exclusively to Duchamp. After meeting with Kiesler,
Duchamp cabled Walter Arensberg in Hollywood to inquire about the
address of a photographer who had taken some pictures of Duchamp's
work before World War II. Duchamp wanted to contact him again in connection
with View.
The cable said, "PLEASE WIRE ADDRESS OF MR LITTLE WHO PHOTOGRAPHED
MY PICTURES SOME YEARS AGO STOP VIEW MAGAZINE PREPARDING [sic]
DUCHAMP NUMBER WRITING= MARCEL DUCHAMP."
Not noted by his biographers but also on that
same day, Duchamp ran a very important errand.
He asked Ms. Elsie Jenriche to confirm the authenticity of his rectified
readymade L.H.O.O.Q.(Figure 1), made
twenty-five years earlier in 1919. We know this from an inscription on
the reverse side of the readymade. It reads, in ink: This is to certify
/ that this is the original / "ready made" LHOOQ / (Figure
2) Paris 1919 / Marcel Duchamp. Beneath this, also in ink,
is a testimony: Witnesseth: / This 22nd day of / December, 1944 / Elsie
Jenriche.
A rubber stamp to the right of Ms. Jenriche's name declares that she was a notary public
(Figure 3): NOTARY PUBLIC, New York Co. / N. Y. Co. Clk. No. 63, Reg. No.
82J-3 / Commission expires March 30, 1945. But can we be sure of this?
The 1943 A to L
volume of Notaries Public N.Y. County Term Expires 1943 (archive
#0394442), begins
to eliminate doubt. Ms. Jenriche is listed, along with her profession
(public stenographer) and signature. Then, in the 1945 A to K volume
of the Notaries Public N.Y. County Term Expires 1945 (archive
#0394442), Elsie Jenriche is listed again, this time as a public stenographer
at the Hotel St. Regis (Figure
4,5).
The entry is dated 17 March 1943 with an expiration of 30 March 1945
(Figure 6).
This is precisely in accordance with the stamp on the back of L.H.O.O.Q.
Fast forward some
fifty years. On Thursday, 29 April 1999, Mr. Jonathan van Nostren,
archivist of the Division of Old Records at New York County's Surrogate
Court Hall of Records, declared that Elsie Jenriche's signature on
verso L.H.O.O.Q. is "authentic," adding that "there's no doubt
that the work was properly notarized."
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Figure 3
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Figure 4,5 |
Figure 6 |
Notes
1.
Marcel Duchamp, Pontus Hulten, ed., 1993. Why
is Marcel Duchamp´s Bicycle Wheel Shaking on Its Stool?
2.
am grateful to Francis M. Naumann for pointing out that fours years prior
to this ‘errand,’ Duchamp intended to sell L.H.O.O.Q. to Louise
and Walter Arensberg. In a letter dated 16 July 1940, Duchamp writes from
Arcachon, France: Une autre chose dans la même genre est l’original
de la Joconde aux moustaches (1919) / Pensez-vous que $100 soit trop pour
la dite Joconde (Something else in the same category is the original
of the Mona Lisa with a mustache (1919) / Do you think that $100 would
be too much for the so-called Mona Lisa ). The Arensbergs are not
known to have acquired the work. Arturo Schwarz in his The Complete
Works of Marcel Duchamp, vol. 2 (New York: Delano, 1997) lists the
Cordier & Ekstrom Gallery in New York and the collector Mary Sisler
as previous owners of L.H.O.O.Q. As for its current status, it
is now in a private collection in Paris. As yet unaccounted for is the
Pierre Matisse Gallery, New York, which on a label on the work’s verso
is credited (as Matisse Gal.) for loaning the work to the Museum
of Modern Art’s traveling exhibition The Art of Assemblage which
was on display in New York from 10 October - 12 November 1961.
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