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A PERFORMANCE FOR
NEW YORK CITY
(Sunday April 30th, 2000)
In the April of this year artist, Patrick Grenier performed
a new work on the streets of New York City which converged several ideas
about memory, loss, vulnerability and reconciliation. The concept was
inspired by Duchamp's sculpture, Large
Glass; a poem by Alfred Jarry titled, The
Passion Considered as a Bicycle Race; Grenier's observation
of a thief carrying Duchamp's modified readymade Bicycle
Wheel just stolen from the Museum of Modern Art in 1995, over
the Brooklyn Bridge; conversations he had with Duchamp's last assistant,
Robert Barnes; the theft of three of his own bicycles; and his interest
in the ability of elephants to remember things over a long period of time.
The idea of bicycles possessing elephant memories alludes to the idea
that possessions are imbibed with the owner's energies and when that item
is taken, its spirit stays with you, as he believes your own spirit leaves
with the object stolen.
Grenier along with two other performers rode on vintage
bicycles, similar in design to the one drawn on the page of sheet music
in Duchamp's 1914 drawing To
Have the Apprentice in the Sun, from the front square of the Brooklyn
Museum to the Museum of Modern Art making a total of twelve stops at locations
related to the artist for on-site short action performances. The cyclists
wore stylized costumes inspired by the work of Duchamp, Jarry and the
physiognomy of elephants. Some of the props for the on-site actions included,
a bicycle made of thorn branches, a unique chess board with pieces derived
from peanut forms and bicycle parts, shadows of bicycles cut out of black
velvet, melted chocolate and raw peanuts.
Bicycles are powered by human engines. Muscles and bones
work with rubber and metal to become one machine.
CREDITS:
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Cyclists:
Patrick Grenier as "Peanut"
Mary Noll as "Padlock"
Claire Pertalion as "Bicycle Wheel"
Video:
Drew Cerria
8mm FILM:
Michael DeRoker
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35mm Stills:
Laura Moss
Driver:
Julio Lopez
Production Assistant:
Tia Shin
Photographs:
Laura Moss
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© 2005 Succession Marcel Duchamp, ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris. All rights
reserved.