The danger is in pleasing an immediate public: the immediate public
that comes around you and takes you in and accepts you and gives you success and everything. Instead of that, you should wait for fifty years or a hundred years for your true public. That is the only
public that interests me.
Marcel Duchamp
It is the REGARDEURS who make the pictures.
Marcel Duchamp
|
| Click to enlarge |
| |
| Figure 1 |
| Jasper Johns, The
Critic Sees, 1961 |
Our ability to believe our eyes is often overridden
by our unquestioning confidence in the judgment of "experts". As in Jasper
John's The Critic Sees (Fig. 1),
we seem to put more trust in the words of these experts whose insights are
often the reiteration of yet others' conclusions, than in our own ability
to bear down and witness what is before us. Marcel Duchamp understood the
human tendency to categorize and simplify as well as rely on the filters
of contemporary opinion to color observation; I believe he used this knowledge
to make a powerful commentary on the state of affairs of modern thought
and the direction that art was taking in his lifetime. Duchamp fought quietly
against the move in twentieth century art towards the purely visual experience,
the 'retinal shudder' as he put it, where "aesthetic delectation depends
almost exclusively upon the sensitivity of the retina without any auxiliary
interpretation."
This auxiliary interpretation was to Duchamp the operation of the intellect
in making and understanding art. Duchamp rejected the Matissean and later
the related Greenbergian theoretical view that saw art in terms of expression
and taste rather than concept. As a result, Duchamp sought to transform
his art and its appreciation into an intellectual endeavor that would restore
it's ties "with society" by once again including "the religious, philosophical
and moral content that bonded the two together."
I believe it was this multi-dimensional conceptual
stance on art, investigations into the wonder of human perception and
a drive to subvert the art world's digestive cycle, rather than a Dada
prankster spirit, that may in part have motivated Duchamp to design and
handcraft his ready-mades and thereafter claim them to be found objects
as recent discoveries suggest. The litany of contradictory statements
regarding their provenance and the mysterious loss or destruction of the
original ready-mades denying any close inspection stood as a challenge
to his generation as it continues to be to ours to look not just through
the glasses of contemporary interpretation but to have confidence in the
complexity of our own mind's eye and what it can discern. Calvin Tomkins
quotes and paraphrases Duchamp from an interview he gave to promote the
Société Anonyme in 1920 as follows: If Americans would simply remember
their own "far famed...sense of humor when they see our pictures," he
added, and think for themselves instead of listening to the critics, "modern
art will come into its own."
| Click to enlarge |
| |
| Figure 2 |
| Marcel Ducahmp,
Wanted: $2,000 Reward, 1922 © 2000 Succession Marcel Duchamp,
ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris |
In Wanted: $2000 Reward (Fig.
2) Duchamp puts a price on this challenge and offers not only monetary
compensation but seemingly a clear set of clues to any who wish to question
accepted interpretations and jump beyond retinal readings of this and
his other works. Today we know through the research primarily of Rhonda
Roland Shearer and a growing number of others that the ready-mades and
rectified ready-mades such as L.H.O.O.Q.
and Apollinaire
Enameled
were not purely operations of choice by the artist but in fact highly
manipulated wholly original works.
Wanted: $2000 Reward of 1923 is traditionally
classified as a rectified readymade and "according to [Arturo] Schwarz this
work, which is now lost, was made from a joke poster Duchamp found in a
New York restaurant. He attached his own photographs within two blank rectangles
and had the last line of the lower text altered by a printer so that Rrose
Selavy could be included in the list of aliases."
It reads as follows:
For information leading to the arrest
of George
W. Welch , alias Bull, alias Pickens, etcetry,
etcetry. Operated Bucket Shop in New York under
name HOOKE, LYON, and CINQUER . Height about
5 feet 9 inches. Weight about 180 pounds. Com-
plexion medium, eyes same. Known also under na-
me RROSE SELAVY.
|
|
Click
to enlarge |
|
|
|
|
Figure 3 |
Figure 4 |
|
Marcel
Ducahmp, Photograph of the original
Wanted (1922) Poster, 1936 © 2000 Succession
Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris |
Marcel Duchamp,
Photo of the
handwritten transcription for Wanted: $2,000 Reward, 1938
© 2000 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris |
This work originally appeared sometime between 1922
and 1923 and later in 1938, when Duchamp used photos taken in 1936 of
the original (Figs. 3, 4)
to reconstruct it.
In 1963 Duchamp used Wanted: $2,000 Reward as the central image,
a poster within a poster, for his first museum retrospective, by or
of Marcel Duchamp or Rrose Selavy (fig.5). In the context of his retrospective,
where 114 of his works were displayed,
we are left wondering why Duchamp sought to portray himself as a criminal.
The implication being that the character pictured, Duchamp, has gotten
away with something, the question is what? This analysis attempts to determine
the nature of the crime as it was presented in the exhibition poster to
spectators in Pasadena in 1963 and in doing so reveals that Wanted:
$2,000 Reward may not be a simple rectified readymade but instead
a wholly original work.
| Click to enlarge |
| |
| Figure 5 |
| Marcel Duchamp, A
Poster Within a Poster, poster for "Marcel Duchamp: A Retrospective
Exhibition," Pasadena Art Museum, October 8 - November 3, 1963 ©
2000 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris |
We know at least from Genre Allegory (George Washington)
of 1943 that Duchamp is familiar with this well-known first President
in American history though we cannot determine whether he was aware of
him in 1923. If we assume that in the interval between his first arrival
to the United States in 1915 and 1923 Duchamp learns of George Washington,
we can then speculate that perhaps the middle initial "W" as in the common
abbreviation GW, in the first sentence of Wanted: $2000 Reward
is a stand in for Washington resulting in the proper name "George Washington
Welch". I make this leap in considering simultaneously the proceeding
word "Welch" and how it interacts with the name and mythology of
George Washington. If we look up welch in Merriam Webster's Collegiate
Dictionary we find that it is a variation on Welsh a word already in usage
by 1905, whose second entry means to break one's word:
Main Entry: welsh
Pronunciation: 'welsh, 'welch
Function: intransitive verb
Etymology: probably from Welsh, adjective
Date: 1905 1 : to avoid payment
-- used with on on his debts> 2
: to break one's word : RENEGE
<welched on their promises>
- welsh·er noun |
| Click to
enlarge |
| |
| Figure 6 |
| Marcel Duchamp, Genre
Allegory [George Washington], 1943 © 2000 Succession Marcel
Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris |
| |
| Figure
7 |
| Marcel Duchamp,
Self Portrait in Profile, Zinc template, 1957 © 2000
Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris |
Thus, the noun "welch" after the name "Washington" disappoints
our expectations as we are more likely to remember Washington for his virtue
since his character is often defined by the well known story of the cherry
tree and the famous line "I cannot tell a lie...." The juxtaposition of
the symbolism surrounding "George Washington" and the definition of "Welch"
yields a construction such as virtue-purity (George Washington) reneged-broken
(Welch). If we apply this notion of purity to the readymades, since after
all they demonstrate that choice is the purest possible artistic expression,
we begin to realize the significance of the concept "purity reneged." This
occurs only if we accept that compelling evidence today reveals that the
ready-mades such as In advance of a Broken Arm (1915) or Hat Rack
(1917)
are not the operation of pure choice but cleverly crafted to appear as if
hand selected industrially produced objects. An additional interpretation
of 'George W Welch' transposes the persona of a dishonest Washington directly
to Duchamp himself (Figs.6, 7),
where we can see that perhaps Duchamp wishes to portray the nature of his
crime through the characterization of a virtuous or honest artist/leader
that has broken his word. With either reading already we sense a theme of
deception.
| Click to enlarge |
| |
| Figure 8 |
| Marcel Duchamp,
With Hidden Noise (bottom), 1916 © 2000 Succession Marcel Duchamp,
ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris |
This theme continues in the same sentence with the use
of the words alias and etcetry visually linked by repetition
and their appearance in lowercase. The word alias is significant
when the proper English pronunciation "el - e - as" is mildly re-stressed,
resulting in the sound "a - lie- as." The beginning "a" sound disappears
completely when the two aliases are pronounced in succession, the resulting
sound yields - lies, lies. The second set of repeated words in lowercase
letters in this sentence is "etcetry, etcetry." The word "etcetry" is a
playful variation of et cetera spoken with a southern drawl, signifying
others of the same kind, but if we look at it as a French homophone it takes
on new meaning. I should note that Duchamp was deeply interested in the
writings of Raymond Roussel dating back to 1912 and particularly in his
word
play(11) that was based
on a system of slightly distorted homophones.(12)
Also, we see in other works such as With Hidden Noise (Fig.
8) of 1916 that Duchamp already easily jumps between
French and English. Therefore it is not a great leap to transform etcetry
into "et c'est [le] tri" the final try (pronounced: tree) perfectly
correlating with tri, the participle of the verb trier in
French. Le Grand Robert dictionary of the French language gives a definition
of this verb and dates its first appearance in the language:
TRIER
v. tr. - V. 1160; p.e. bas lat. Tritare<broyer>
, du class.
terere, parce
inutilisables>
1. Choisir parmi d'autres; extraire d'un plus grand nombre, après
examen. Trier des semences une a une. Ouvrier qui trie les assiettes
sans defaut. Trier les homes propres au service. Selectionner.-
Trier
des graines sur le volet. - Au fig. Choisir en operant une selection
tres stricte. On restreint le nombre des nouveaux arrivants, on
les
trie sur le volet. |
The translation from French to English for trier
is to sort, select, pick or hand pick.
The resulting phrase "et c'est [le] tri" translates to the English "and
it is [the] sorting" or "and it is [the] choosing". Now, if we combine
the lowercase words alias and etcetry linked by their proximity,
repetition and lowercase status in the sentence we arrive at the phrase
"lies and it is [the] choosing, lies and it is [the] choosing" or "lies,
lies, and it is [the] choosing, and it is [the] choosing." As in the case
of George Washington Welch, the theme of deception emerges from the text
in Wanted: $2000 Reward. In this example an allusion to the ready-mades,
defined as objects "elevated to the status of art by the mere act of the
artist's selection,"
may surface as the act of selection is directly addressed by the use of
trier while simultaneously the definition of the ready-mades as
a process of selection is put to question by prefacing the act with the
notion of lying. As we will see, the next example reiterates this emerging
theme of false choices.
In the same sentence we find the proper names "Bull" and
"Pickens" thematically connected by the use of capital letters. Other
than the large male farm animal, "Bull" signifies a falsehood or a down-right
lie in a colloquial sense, as in the common expression "that's a load
of bull." The next word "Pickens" is the southern drawl equivalent of
"pickings" from which one need not go far to arrive at its synonym, "choices
[selections]". When these two words are combined the result is "Bull Pickens
[Pickings]" or " false choices [selections]." In light of the previous
two examples and in the context of the ready-mades this example also seems
to challenge the authenticity of the ready-mades as everyday objects raised
to the status of art solely through an artist's choice.
The following sentence - "Operated Bucket Shop in New York
under name HOOKE, LYON, and CINQUER" - may further the theme of deception
in connection to the ready-mades. First, we should take note of Duchamp's
use of "Operated" at the beginning of this sentence since he often uses
the term "operation" when referring to processes surrounding the ready-mades.
An example appears in one of his notes in the The Green Box that
states," to separate the mass-produced ready-made from the ready found
- the separation is an operation."
A definition for "bucket shop" from Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary
a term that dates back to 1875, aids in addressing the remainder of the
sentence:
Main Entry: bucket
shop
Function: noun
Date: 1875
1 - : a saloon in which liquor was formerly sold from or dispensed
in open containers (as buckets or pitchers)
2 -a- : a gambling establishment that formerly used market fluctuations
(as in securities or commodities) as a basis for gaming b- : a dishonest
brokerage firm; especially : one that formerly failed to execute
customers' margin orders in expectation of making a profit from market
fluctuations adverse to the customers' interests. |
| Click to enlarge |
| |
| Figure 9 |
| Marcel Duchamp,
The Blind Man, no. 1, 1917 © 2000 Succession Marcel Duchamp,
ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris |
The operator of a bucket shop thus capitalizes on the
gullibility and blindness of individuals to see that they are being taken
(Fig. 9). A successful
sale requires that the customer take the bait as the expression goes, "hook,
line and sinker" a homophone derived from the aliases HOOKE, LYON and CINQUER
appearing at the end of the sentence. Duchamp then, may see himself in New
York as the operator of a bucket shop of sorts where questionable gaming
or brokering may translate literally to his not following art world rules.
From the "dishonesty" of claiming the ready-mades, a product of the artist's
choice, to the eventual signing of inaccurate versions of the ready-mades
Duchamp's actions become the equivalent of selling margin orders for profit
adverse to customers' interests or when put into the art context, the audience's
expectations. By delivering an inaccurate story to his immediate audience,
Duchamp drives the figurative 'HOOKE' deeper and with every passing generation
his "crime of deception" quietly fades from view, as the surrogates he happily
signs
become the "sign" for the lost originals. Through the proliferation of the
photographic documentation of these over time he virtually replaces the
few smoking gun originals that nevertheless co-exist, as those in the Box
in the Valise of 1941. In 1963 around the time of the Pasadena retrospective,
Teeny [Duchamp] describes Marcel Duchamp's reaction to Richard Hamilton's
article for Art International as making Duchamp feel "transparent…
as some fish are, showing their bones and everything."
In it Hamilton writes:
| Duchamp has busied himself for many
years in the propagation of his achievements thorough the media of
printed reproductions and certified copies so that now we begin to
accept the substitute as the work. I certainly fell in the well-laid
trap so thoroughly that I boasted of knowing what he had done without
ever having seen more than a few things in the flesh… |
Indeed up until a few years ago, our reading of Duchamp's
oeuvre had long ago shifted from direct observation to glimpses at inaccurate
versions of the ready-mades and the reiterated voices of what the critics
saw and see as Jasper John's cast sculpture reveals so eloquently. Even
early on, though, there were murmurs that may have pointed at the "deception."
André Breton, founder of the surrealists and friend of Duchamp, may have
made allusions to it in the publication Minotaure from 1935:
| Marcel Duchamp's journey through
the artistic looking glass determines a fundamental crisis of painting
and sculpture which reactionary maneuvers and stock-exchange brokerages
will not be able to conceal much longer. |
I wonder still if Breton's mention of reactionary maneuvers
and stock-exchange brokerages is a direct reference to Duchamp's bucket
shop bait and switch strategy of signing his name to copies of lost ready-mades
or simply to moves in the art world in the 1930s. In 1964 the "deception"
was questioned again when Alfred Barr challenged Duchamp's concept of indifference
in selecting the ready-mades at a panel discussion at MOMA by asking "why
do they look so beautiful today?" Duchamp answered,"Nobody's perfect."
Perhaps the imperfection was always intended; perhaps
the fugitive pictured in Wanted: $2,000 Reward wants to get caught,
just not immediately. The remaining text in Wanted: $2,000 Reward
seems more descriptive than cryptic describing a set of physical attributes
following the convention of wanted type posters. Other than the well-known
homophone RROSE SELAVY, Duchamp's female alter ego first appearing in 1920,
which when pronounced in French yields "Eros, c'est la vie" or in English,
"Eros, [that] is life," this final text appears barren of secondary meanings.
It seems simply to function as a delay in the capture of the "criminal"
by misdirecting our attention and keeping us from challenging the "official
story" of Wanted: $2,000 Reward.
But does it really end there? If we continue looking
for further wordplay relating to the ready-mades we could read "Height"
as its equivalent in French, "Hauteur" a homonym for auteur that
translates to the English author followed by the numbers 5 and 9
correlating to feet and inches. Could these instead be an approximation
of the number of important ready-mades 'about' 14 that Duchamp 'authored'
and wishes to be measured against? And could 'Weight' be a homonym for "Wait"
or delay, a concept Duchamp explored from his subtitling the Large
Glass of 1923 delay in glass,
to the various delays in the publication of his notes, to his posthumous
unveiling of Etant Donnes in 1969 to our present delayed further
understanding of his works? If we continue to translate measures, could
we take the 180 lbs. in the context of delay and translate it to the French
kilogram and end up with 81.81(repeating), Duchamp's age at death. This
number also roughly matches the number of years in delay from the unveiling
of the first well known ready-made, Fountain of 1917, to our present
understanding that it along with the other ready-mades were more than simply
operations of choice. Indeed this particular delay brings us to a time in
history when we can finally asses the true "weight" of his oeuvre, particularly
when we recall that he was willing to wait fifty or a hundred years for
his ideal audience. And if as they say, "time is money" can we translate
the $2,000 or 2K from money to years and mark our time and ourselves as
the arrival of his much 'wanted' ideal audience?
Many of these last observations, I realize, may be marred
with conjecture but I offer them to raise the question of intentionality
in reading Duchamp's work. When is one over reading or misinterpreting the
work and when are certain connections justified? When our readings turn
up incredible results we are left to wonder whether it is just our imagination
or if it is possible for one man to juggle simultaneously such a vast amount
of multiplicity of meaning.
Whether he could, could not or did should be debated
and in terms of Wanted: $2000 Reward the apparent references to lies,
choices and the ready-mades should be central to the discussion. To answer
the question of intentionality I believe it is important first to attempt
to find a version of the original joke poster, if there ever existed one.
If the search turns up an original then the argument is settled and Duchamp
simply found an extremely appropriate ready-made in 1923 and modified it
slightly.
| Click to enlarge |
| |
| Figure 10 |
| Marcel Duchamp, Boite-en-valise
(The Box in a Valise), folder 9, 1941 © 2000 Succession Marcel
Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris |
On the other hand, if there is no evidence of such a
poster then this analysis may aid in re-defining Wanted: $2000 Reward
as one amongst the growing group of highly layered handcrafted works originally
classified as ready-mades, rectified ready-mades, and assisted ready-mades
to name a few of Duchamp's designations. From urinal to snow shovel present
findings consistently demonstrate that Duchamp may have never settled for
simple choice, though he went to great pains to make it appear so. There
are many inconsistencies surrounding Wanted: $2,000 Reward that point
to this being the case. For one, Wanted: $2,000 Reward is grouped
in Duchamp's portable museum, Box in a Valise of 1941 (Fig.10),
with three other works including L.H.O.O.Q. that has now convincingly been
proven by Rhonda Roland Shearer to be a deftly refinished photo composite
of Duchamp's face and the Mona
Lisa's instead of a cheap chromo reproduction of the Gioconda as the
"official story" claims.
The other two works in the grouping, Tzanck Check (1919) and Obligation
de Monte Carlo (1924), both known to be handcrafted surrogates of actual
documents, classified as imitated rectified ready-mades. It seems, therefore,
implausible in terms of the grouping in the Box and in the broader context
of the other handmade ready-mades that Duchamp would include such a simple
slightly altered found object in his oeuvre. And furthermore, it is difficult
to imagine a self-described meticulous man keenly aware of his place in
history and moreover the workings of posterity choosing what overtly looks
like a slightly altered playful "joke" as the attraction to his most important
exhibition.
Other incongruities remain, such as the many homophonic allusions and particularly
those that jump from English to French, a trademark in Duchamp's punning.
Would a New York joke poster writer, writing for an English speaking audience
in the 1920s pun in French? And finally, can the correlation with present
knowledge of false ready-mades be ignored in light of the apparent repeated
references to deception and selection in Wanted: $2,000 Reward as
deciphered in this essay?
As the body of evidence grows and demonstrates Duchamp's
ability and wish to visually layer his works in terms of multiplicity of
viewpoints and simultaneity of meaning then it follows that he may have
pursued similar ends in works like Wanted: $2,000 Reward that focus
on the dimension of language. Duchamp puts it best:
| I like words in a poetic sense. Puns
for me are like rhymes ... for me, words are not merely a means of
communication. You know, puns have always been considered a low form
of wit, but I find them a source of stimulation both because of their
actual sound and because of unexpected meanings attached to the interrelationship
of disparate words. For me, this is an infinite field of joy and it's
always right at hand. Sometimes four or five different levels of meaning
come through. |
If we take Duchamp at his word in this instance, we hear
clearly that he not only can arrive at multiple meanings (up to four or
five levels) but also enjoys bending language in the manner this deciphering
of Wanted: $2,000 Reward proposes he may have done.
To end I want to add one last possible reference to
the ready-mades and the meaning of art in general found in the title of
the piece, WANTED, printed in bold red block lettering at the top of the
poster. The connection comes when we think of the reason for wanted posters
in the first place.
| Click to enlarge |
| |
| Figure 11 |
| Marcel Duchamp, L.H.O.O.Q.,
1919 © 2000 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris |
| Click to enlarge |
| |
| Figure 12 |
|
Marcel Duchamp, L.H.O.O.Q.
Shaved, 1965 © 2000 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP,
Paris |
Wanted posters are meant to activate looking in the eventual
hope of finding. As when we "L.H.O.O.Q." [read:
LOOK] closely in 1919 and find Marcel Duchamp where the Mona Lisa should
be and "rasée" [read: re-see] in 1965 (Figs.11,12)
that he has gone
again,
then perhaps in Wanted: $2000 Reward, Marcel Duchamp affords us another
chance to find him out and in the process of re-discovery we end up claiming
our reward: a way back to an active role in the appreciation of art that
involves not only looking with our eyes but also with our imagination and
the full capacity of our intellect or as Jasper Johns describes "through
the retinal boundaries which had been established with Impressionism into
a field where language, thought and vision act upon one another."
And, if we accept this role, in the end we become artists in a sense as
our readings - what we choose to see - become the true ready-mades found
again in the wake of their disappearance.
After all, tout-fait (ready-made) is a homophone for tu fait
(you make).
A ready-made is a work of art without
an artist to make it.
Marcel Duchamp, 1963
| Click to enlarge |
| |
| |
|
Marvin Lazarus, Retouched
photograph of Duchamp with moustache and goatee drawn on his face
at the 1961 "Assemblages" exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art
© 2000 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris |
1.
Ades, Dawn; Cox, Niel; Hopkins, David. Marcel Duchamp. London:
Thames and Hudson, 1999, p. 71.
2.
Ades, p. 71.
3.
Tomkins, Calvin. Duchamp, A Biography. New York: Henry Holt and
Company, 1996, p. 226.
4.
Follow this link to read compelling evidence in Rhonda Roland Shearer's
scientific discoveries that reveal the ready-mades are not.
5.
Follow this hyperlink to see more evidence by Rhonda Roland Shearer that
points to unexpected dimensions in Duchamp's art.
6.
Joselit, David. Infinite Regress, Marcel Duchamp 1910-1914. Cambridge,
Mass.: MIT, 1998, p.108.
7.
Bonk, Ecke. Marcel Duchamp, The Box in a Valise. New York: Rizzoli,
1989, p. 243.
8.
D'Harnoncourt, Anne; McShine, Kynaston (eds.). Marcel Duchamp.
Munich: Prestel, 1989, p. 28. Walter Hopps organized the exhibition held
at the Pasadena Art Museum between October 8 and November 9, 1963. Duchamp
designed the poster and catalog cover for the exhibition.
9.
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 10th ed., 1999, Merriam-Webster,
Incorporated. "Welch" is a variation of "welsh." To confirm the existence
and match the definition to the era, I have verified in a 1920 copy of
Webster's New International Dictionary that the definition is consistent
with its use in the analysis. I have chosen to use the updated version
because the tenth edition includes the sense of the word in the 1920s
but also gives a more nuanced definition as well as provides the date
of its first appearance in the English language.
10.
Rhonda Roland Shearer convincingly demonstrates that both of these ready-mades
are not simple found objects. In the case of In Advance of a Broken
Arm, the meeting of the arm to the shovelhead is so fragile that the
shovel would break at the neck if used to shovel snow. Furthermore, the
shovel scoop is unsupported in the back, thus making it flimsy and unusable
as a surface for shoveling. The Hat Rack is equally problematic
as a real object as it appears in The Box in a Valise reproduction
as an asymmetrical five hooked impossible looking construction. This differs
greatly from subsequent versions (i.e. Schwarz) that offer six symmetrical
hooks. Follow this link
to read about these discoveries in more detail.
11.
Follow this link to read more about Duchamp's word play. Through a collection
of excellent examples this article by Steven Jay Gould extensively explores,
deciphers and catalogues many of Duchamp's creative uses of language.
12.
Ades, p. 109.
13.
Le Grand Robert de la Langue Francaise, Deuxieme Edition copyright
© 1985 by Dictionnaires Le Robert, Paris.
14.
The Collins Robert French Dictionary, 1995, New York: HarperCollins,
Paris: Dictionnaires Le Robert. I should point out that trier comes
from the Latin tritare whose French synonym is broyer, to
grind as appears in the definition of trier in Le Robert.
This connection is difficult to overlook when we consider that Duchamp
focuses on the grinding and milling process in three other works, his
Chocolate Grinder (Broyeuse de Chocolat) of 1913, Coffee Mill (Moulin
a Café) 1911 and Glider Containing a Water Mill in Neighboring
Metals of 1913-15. Furthermore, both the Chocolate Grinder
and the Water Mill reappear as central images in the Large Glass
of 1923. The process of selection as a sorting out of useful and useless
("qu'on broie le grain pour en separer les parties inutilisables") as
well as a generating force (Water Mill) may point to a theme in
the Large Glass centering on the creative process itself particularly
in terms of idea generation [water mill], filtering [sieves], and whole
to parts [grinder].
15.
Naumann, Francis. Marcel Duchamp, The Art of Making Art in the Age
of Mechanical Reproduction. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc, 1999,
p. 299.
16.
Ades, p. 155.
17.
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 10th edition, 1999, Merriam-Webster,
Incorporated. To confirm the existence and match the definition to the era,
I have verified in a 1920 copy of Webster's New International Dictionary
that the definition is consistent with its use in the analysis. I have chosen
to use the updated version because the tenth edition gives a fuller definition
outlining the history of the expression as well as providing the date of
its first appearance in the English language.
18.
Incidentally, Duchamp signed these copies with the inscription "pour copie
conforme," re-written as a homophone in English it yields "poor copy con
for me". By "poor copy" Duchamp may be referring to the growing evidence
(by Rhonda Roland Shearer) that the ready-mades are impossible objects whose
construction in three dimensions is quite simply impossible since the lost
originals, now only seen in photo form, appear to be composite images comprising
multiple viewpoints spliced to form one coherent image. The "con for me"
reference may thus point to the notion that with every new manifestation
of an incorrect three dimensional version of a readymade we grow blinder
to the discrepancies in the originals thus the new version serves to support
Duchamp's ruse and thus the con [is made] for him.
19.
Naumann, p. 235.
20.
Ibid.
21.
André Breton from Nauman, p.161.
22.
Tomkins, p. 427.
23.
Joselit, p.143.
24.
d'Harnoncourt, p. 289.
25.
In Tomkins, p. 445, Duchamp discusses with the author in 1964 the roughly
fifty year cycles that scientific ideas go through before being replaced
by newer ideas that challenge everything before them. He also touches on
humor as follows: I never could stand the seriousness of life, but when
the serious is tinted with humor, it makes a nicer color. Duchamp further
explains his position on posterity in 1952 in Bonk, p. 18, from a conversation
with Suzanne Duchamp and Jean Crotti: "Artists of all times are like the
gamblers of Monte Carlo, and this blind lottery allows some to succeed and
ruins others. In my opinion, neither the winners nor the losers are worth
worrying about. Everything happens through pure luck. Posterity is a real
bitch who cheats some, reinstates others (El Greco) and reserves the right
to change her mind every 50 years."
26.
Marcel Duchamp, quoted from: Kuenzli, Rudolf and Francis M. Naumann (eds.).
Marcel Duchamp, Artist of the Century. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT, 1989,
p. 6.
27.
Follow this hyperlink to see the hide and seek Wilson-Lincoln effect illustrated.
For Duchamp, the ephemeral nature as well as the relativistic aspect of
perception may be central to his oeuvre, where the theme of "now you see
it, now you don't" constantly surfaces. This is consistent with the frustration
of trying to grasp multiple viewpoints/meanings simultaneously in Duchamp's
work both with his puns as well as the "impossible
ready-mades."
28.
Johns, Jasper. "Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968)," Artforum 7, no. 3. (November
1968), p. 6.
29.
Tomkins, p. 397. Duchamp speaks of the artist's role: the creative act is
not performed by the artist alone. The spectator brings the work in contact
with the external world by deciphering and interpreting its inner qualifications
and thus adds his contribution to the creative act.
30.
Special thanks to Monsieur André Gervais whose comments during the writing
of this article have strengthened the final result.
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