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- subject = art 101
- title = Marcel Duchamp
- papers = Marcel Duchamp is considered
- as one of the most influential artists of the 20th Century by the modern art
- world. Duchamp, who participated in artistic movements from Fauvism to Surrealism,
- was an innovator and a revolutionary within the art world. Duchamp, being
- a founding force in the Dada movement, was also a main influencing factor of
- the development of the 20th Century avant-garde art. All in all Duchamp has
- become a legend within the art world.
- Marcel Duchamp was born on July 28,1887
- in Blainville France. Being the brother of two prominent artists, Raymond Duchamp-Villon
- and Jacques Villon, it seemed only natural that the young Marcel Duchamp would
- participate in the arts. Also, his childhood home was abundantly decorated
- with seascapes, landscapes, and etchings produced by his grandfather Emile-Frederic
- Nicolle. As he himself put it, ôWhen you see so many paintings youÆve got
- to paint.ö In 1907, at age 17, Duchamp resolved to become an artist.
- Marcel
- Duchamp had the great fortune of entering the world of art at a most exciting
- time when the birth of Fauvism and Cubism was in the not so distant future.
- Although Marcel incorporated these styles he was never satisfied with any
- single style. He felt that styles were learned techniques which put creativity,
- exploration, and imagination in the background of the art scene. DuchampÆs
- view of the lack of creativity and originality may have prompted many of his
- later creations which, at the time of their production, seemed absurd.
- Throughout
- Marcel DuchampÆs career he dabbled in a wide variety of styles ranging from
- Fauvism to Cubism, all the way to the art of Ready-mades. Although he openly
- expressed that painting bored him, he did it quite well. Early in his career
- he, like most young artists, painted friends and family, things he was familiar
- with. DuchampÆs only formal training came at the Academie Julian in Paris from
- where he dropped out after only eighteen months to pursue his own interests.
- This seems to be a defining characteristic of Marcel DuchampÆs career, he
- did things that suited him, not what others felt was the correct thing to do.
- Marcel
- DuchampÆs artistic output began with portraits of people close to him such
- as family members and close friends. At this time Duchamp was experimenting
- with Fauvism, the art of the ôwild beastsö. In this from of art one could
- use arbitrary colors. This is the reason one might see portraits made by Duchamp
- from around 1910 in which people are represented with greenish skin or blue
- hair. Throughout DuchampÆs career it was not as important to be totally accurate
- as it was to get a creative point or theme across.
- One negative view of Fauvism
- was that it was not intellectually stimulating for artists. This is a main
- reason why many artists, one of them being Duchamp, turned their artistic focus
- the avant-garde. Cubism, with complex planes and geometrically sound shapes
- gave artists the intellectual stimulation that they craved. Colors of the
- early cubist period were muted which put the spotlight more on the visual effects
- of the art. The possibilities of manipulation of the shapes to DuchampÆs own
- interests benefited him immensely.
- Duchamp prospered as he turned away from
- the conservative Fauvism moving towards the avant-garde and experimentation
- within the cubist mode of art. He discovered ways to manipulate his paintings
- to be able to show the intricacies of his favorite game chess. Duchamp believed
- that art should be left up to the mind rather than the eyes, just as in chess.
- His first production of the Cubist origin is titled The Sonata. It is said
- that many of the characteristics of this painting reveal influence from a group
- of Cubist artists, which included his two brothers, called the Puteaux Cubists.
- This group of artists rebelled against casual cubism ,which was practiced by
- the likes of Picasso and Braque, in favor of geometric precision.
- Duchamp
- was a pioneer in Cubism by the way he showed movement in his paintings. His
- first attempt at showing movement through the geometric shapes is titled Sad
- Young Man On A Train. In this work Duchamp uses four or five overlapping profiles
- moving from left to right across the canvas. The colors were dark symbolizing
- DuchampÆs mood at the time. He was preparing to leave Paris in favor of, what
- he believed to be a less commercial area, Munich. In another attempt at movement
- in Cubism, Duchamp created a painting known as Nude Descending A Staircase
- No.1. In viewing this work, the first version of one of his most famous works,
- one can see the motion is much more explicit. This painting and its other version
- was a combination of cubism and a play on futurism. In the second version
- of this work, Nude Descending A Staircase No. 2, Duchamp further developed
- and refined the movement of the piece through the use of swirling lines and
- arced dots. When the painting was introduced in Europe the Puteaux Cubists
- reac
- ted violently which ended MarcelÆs affiliation with the group. When the
- painting was shown in America at the New York Armory Show in 1912 the American
- critics reacted quite the same as that of those in Europe. Although the painting
- was very much criticized at the time, four decades after it was unveiled people
- began to refer to Nude Descending A Staircase No.2 as a masterpiece.
- After
- Duchamp completed his painting of Nude Descending A Staircase No.2 he ventured
- to Munich where he started such projects as a watercolor titled Virgin and
- two mastery oils titled Bride and Passage From the Virgin to the Bride. He
- also began to sketch what was to be a project of his for the next decade of
- his life, The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even. The effects of
- two of DuchampÆs paintings at this time, Virgin and later in Passage From the
- Virgin to the Bride, he ventured into uncharted artistic territory with the
- use of Cubist techniques but the effect was not cubist at all. The images were
- unusual and almost machine-like in form. Duchamp had created a new form of
- art but, as he tended to do, he abandoned the form in favor of letting others
- develop his ideas. This virtually closed Marcel DuchampÆs career as a painter.
- In 1915, at age 25, Duchamp moved to New York taking him out of the world of
- conventional painting.
- Duchamp became bored with retinal art, art for the
- eye alone. He wanted to remove himself from all his previous ties with painting
- in order to produce something different and new. One idea he had to produce
- something different was to execute his workings on glass instead of the traditional
- canvas surface. This would certainly be different but the art would still be
- the same, and Duchamp recognized this. His answer to this problem was a new
- technique of drawing which was derived from an engineering method called mechanical
- drawing. Although this now seems to be quite ordinary, at the time it was
- a major breakthrough in the art industry.
- Now, with a new idea at hand, Marcel
- began to derive the ways in which he would develop this new style. To carry
- out the task of drawing unlike your hand tells you to Duchamp said he had to
- unlearn to draw to execute his new ideas and technique. In a manner of speaking
- this is what he did. Duchamp first experimented with the media which was to
- be used on the glass. At first he used paraffin fluoridic acid as an engraving
- tool for the glass. The fumes were quite strong and he quickly gave that up.
- Next, he tried outlining his design with fine wire which would serve to keep
- colors in place. This was perfect for DuchampÆs needs. The wire kept the colors
- neatly in place while it could be manipulated to make lines as straight or
- wavy as he desired. As difficult as this task was to execute, Marcel Duchamp
- was satisfied.
- Now that he had the tools and ideas Marcel could begin his
- work. He completed a work known as Glider which was ultimately produced to
- be employed into his later work referred to as The Large Glass or more formally
- named The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even. Glider ,or Sleigh as
- it is sometimes referred to as, was produced as a part of the Bachelor Machine
- which was a main part of the Large Glass.
- Although the Large Glass was
- DuchampÆs primary project in the mid 1910s he did venture into other controversial
- subjects. In 1914 Duchamp signed his name to a bottle rack in effect creating
- his first ready-made. Ready-mades are objects that are signed and titled becoming
- more an object of observation rather than a functional one. The ready-mades
- were an attack on traditional western art. Duchamp felt that any man-made object
- was a work of art therefore treating them as such by signing his name on them
- and displaying these objects. This type of art was an instrumental part of
- the artistic movement known as Dada which Duchamp was a main contributor to.
- In
- addition to Bottle Rack Marcel Duchamp produced controversy with other ready-mades.
- Two of the better well know ready-mades were In Advance of the Broken Arm
- and Fountain. In Advance of the Broken Arm was the first American ready-made.
- This work of art was a shovel, bought in a Columbus Avenue hardware store,
- which had been signed and hung from the ceiling. In 1917 Fountain was scheduled
- for display at an art show put on by a group in which Duchamp helped found,
- The Society of Independent Artists. Although the showing was supposedly to
- have no restrictions on content the committee refused to show Fountain which
- was simply a urinal signed under the name of ôR.Muttö.
- Duchamp also pioneered
- another form of art known as kinetic art. Kinetic art, for our purposes, is
- art which employed actual movement. In 1913 Duchamp employed the front wheel
- from a bicycle in a type of sculpture. He mounted the wheel to a kitchen stool
- in effect making the first mobile sculpture. Duchamp would later name the kinetic
- sculptures of Alexander Calder simply as mobiles. These simple sculptures
- named mobiles and ready-mades were designed to make people think, to use their
- mind to understand art instead of only using their eyes.
- In early 1916 the
- Dada movement was born in a direct result of World War I. This was not really
- even an artistic movement. To be more accurate the Dada art was more a frame
- of mind. This frame of mind was anti-art and, as time progressed, anti-everything
- else. The Dada movement was seen by conservatives as dangerous. The French
- almost felt as if it could have been of German or even Bolshevik origin. In
- any case the Dada movement started as a protest to the war which tore apart
- Europe. In time Dada seemed to not only protest the war but everything else
- also. In the end Dada was destroyed by achieving acceptance that it could
- not accept.
- Duchamp, in the spirit of a true revolutionary and pioneer,
- became somewhat of a leader of the Dada period. Returning from Buenos Aries
- to Paris, Duchamp joined with fellow artist Picabia whom also was a prime leader
- of the Dada period of art. Duchamp took no part in Dadaist demonstrations
- which seemed to enhanced his reputation even more in the eyes of other Dadaists.
- One of the more controversial and defining works of the Dada period was an
- ôassistedö ready-made in which Duchamp drew a mustache and goatee to a photograph
- of DaVinciÆs Mona Lisa. This, being an ideal example of Dada artwork, represented
- his view that art had become too precious and expensive. Once again, Duchamp
- had stirred the conservatives of the art world into an uproar.
- In 1918 Duchamp
- painted his first new picture after a four year absence. Duchamp produced
- this work, titled Tu mÆ, for a narrow space above an admirerÆs door in New
- York. This composition depicts images of three of DuchampÆs ready-mades. The
- image depicts a bicycle wheel, a corkscrew, and a hat rack. Also a long row
- of overlapping colored squares stretched across the canvas. This proved to
- be Marcel DuchampÆs last formal painting on canvas.
- After this frantic
- time in Europe Marcel returned to life in New York in early 1920. At this
- point in his life Duchamp began experimenting with optics and motion as well
- as resuming work on his masterpiece, The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors,
- Even. In a rather accidental discovery, Duchamp somehow found that when two
- spirals rotated on a common axis but somewhat off center that one appears to
- come forward and the other appears to move backwards producing a corkscrew
- effect. In 1920 Duchamp constructed something titled Revolving Glass which
- demonstrated this movement through the usage of five glass plates at varried
- lengths.
- Soon after DuchampÆs return to New York he decided that he needed
- a change of identity. To meet this need of change Duchamp adopted a female
- alter ego
- known as Rrose Selavy. Duchamp even went as far as to appear in
- a photograph by Man
- Ray while wearing womenÆs clothes. Ready-mades were also
- signed by this name. Two
- of which appeared in 1920 and 1921. The first of
- the two, Fresh Widow, was a
- carpenterÆs French window sample in which the
- panes were covered with highly polished
- black leather. The second, titled
- Why Not Sneeze, was a birdcage filled with pieces of
- white marble. This marble
- was frequently mistaken for lumps of sugar. Works like these
- were designed
- to get people to view objects in a different way in effect creating a type
- of
- new or revoloutionary thought. These were described by Duchamp as not
- objects only in
- the physical sense but also as mental objects or as brain
- facts.
- Duchamp had returned to Paris in 1923 leaving his
- masterpiece, The Large Glass, unfinished. In 1924 Duchamp participated in
- the only performance of Relache, a ballet developed by fellow artists Picabia
- and SatiΘ. During the intermission of this ballet Duchamp appeared in a short
- film with Picabia, Man Ray, and SatiΘ which was formed by Picabia and Rene
- Clair. These two projects proved to be the last flicker of Dadaism.
- Marcel
- DuchampÆs parents died within a week of each other in 1925. Duchamp, who had
- inherited a modest sum of money, ventured into the art market purchasing a
- few pieces of art. In 1926 Duchamp funded a show for a sculptor he greatly
- admired, Brancusi. Duchamp would later, with friend H.P. Roche, purchase a
- quite sizable collection of BrancusiÆs sculptors. It is known that later in
- DuchampÆs life he would sell these sculptures if he needed money for his quite
- limited needs.
- During the rise of Surrealism time period Duchamp was considered
- an icon by the artists of this movement. Although DuchampÆs paintings could
- not even be considered part of the Surrealist movement, he was championed.
- It was DuchampÆs actions which gave him the impressive reputation which was
- thrust upon him. Surrealist artists thought it was a most impressive move to
- abandon what would have been a brilliant career. Many took the saying similar
- to ôlife should be lived, not paintedö as a defining point of their admiration
- for Marcel Duchamp.
- By this time in DuchampÆs life he began to play chess
- more and more. He learned chess as a child and had picked it up with a passion
- again during the first World War. At times in the 1930Æs he represented his
- country on the French championship chess team. Duchamp had time to devote
- most of his time to his favorite sport for the simple fact that DuchampÆs only
- goal in his life at this time was to make it through, to break even.
- In
- June of 1942 Duchamp moved back to what was to be his home for the remained
- of his life, New York. Like most other artists whom moved away from France
- at this time, Duchamp left to escape horrors of the war. Duchamp, whom never
- enjoyed the ôart factoryö in Paris, enjoyed life in New York. DuchampÆs New
- York residence, a small studio at 210 West 14th Street, had no phones. Although
- Duchamp was not producing much art at this time he was not out of the scene.
- Shortly
- after his arrival in New York Marcel, along with Andre Breton, executed a Surrealist
- exhibition for the benefit of French children and war prisoners in the old
- Villard mansion on Madison Avenue. Also Duchamp found joy in promoting the
- careers of young artists in effect helping to develop modern art. What little
- art that Duchamp did at this period consisted of one certain picture which
- was made for the cover of the March 1943 issue of VVV which was founded by
- Andre Breton and Max Ernst. The picture, entitled George Washington, showed
- our first president in a bandage gauze, covered in stars and bloodstains.
- This picture, which was funded by Vogue, was rejected.
- During this same period
- Duchamp was becoming quite popular with many American art students and artists
- alike. In 1945 the Yale University Art Gallery hosted an exhibition of the
- three Duchamp brothers. If that was not enough to heighten MarcelÆs reputation,
- the art-literary magazine View devoted a whole issue to articles dealing with
- Duchamp and all of his accomplishments. DuchampÆs reputation was starting
- to transform from a revolutionary artist to a legendary one.
- After the war
- most of the European artists whom were exiled in the United States returned
- to their native countries. When faced with the question of moving back to France
- or not Duchamp opted to stay in New York where he later became an American
- citizen in 1955. He felt that in Europe, artists considered themselves ôgrandsonsö
- of earlier artists which hindered new and revolutionary ideas. He believed
- Americans could care less about the history of art, in effect making America
- a better place for new developments. Marcel must have been wrong in this aspect
- for future young American innovators would come to considered themselves as
- ôgrandsonsö of Marcel Duchamp. In the 1963 Duchamp exhibition at the Pasadena
- Art Museum effectively canonized Duchamp as a patron saint of modern art.
- While
- living in New York, once again Duchamp played chess, but only on a pleasurable
- level. He married for the second time in 1958 to Alexina Sattler, a woman
- known throughout the art world simply as ôTeenyö. Together they apparently
- lived a extremely happy life making residence in a West 10th Street New York
- apartment. Marcel ventured to art gatherings from time to time but had no desire
- to return to its production. In fact Duchamp was offered $10,000 per year by
- an art dealer named Ronald Knoedler if he would paint a single painting each
- year. Although Duchamp was quite able to perform this task he replied to the
- offer by saying that he had accomplished what he set out to do and was not
- interested in repeating it. What he was concerned with the survival of his
- ideas, not the reproduction of them.
- In hindsight, one could never be
- able to classify Duchamp effectively into any single art category other than
- revolutionary and innovator. Duchamp lived his life on his own terms. He kept
- his independence from the arts. Duchamp refused to be dictated as to what
- would be incorporated into his art. Like many great artistic innovators, Duchamp
- became famous and even a legend from art that the critics of the time called
- absurd and pathetic. When Marcel Duchamp died in 1968 it could be said that
- the FrenchmanÆs independence was his most enduring work of art.
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- BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
-
- Bailly, Jene-Cristophe.
- Duchamp. New York: Universe Books, 1986.
-
-
- Funk and Wagnalls New Encyclopedia.
- vol. 8. USA: Funk and Wagnalls Inc., 1986.
-
-
- Schwarz, Arturo. Marcel Duchamp
- 66 Creative Years. Milan: Gallery Schwarz, 1972.
-
-
- Tomkins, Calvin. The
- World of Marcel Duchamp. New York: Time
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