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Fundacin PROA

Marcel
duchamp:
a work that
is not a work
of art
PROA
Marcel Duchamp
Roue de bicyclette
(Bicycle Wheel),
1913/1964 Sucesin
MD, 2008, ADAGP/Paris,
AUTVIS/Sao Paulo
Exhibition General Directors Abbreviations
BK Bibliothque Kandinsky Centre de
Marcel Duchamp: a work that Jorge Helft
Documentacion et de Recherche du MNAM-CCI
is not a work of art Adriana Rosenberg C.DF David Fleiss Collection, Paris
Fundacin Proa, Curator C.FK Frederick and Lilian Kiesler Private
Buenos Aires. Elena Filipovic Foundation Collection, Viena
C.JMM Jacqueline Matisse Monnier Collection
22.11.08 - 01.02.09 General Coordinator
C.LZ Luizella Zignone Collection
- Cintia Mezza C.MM Moderna Museet Collection, Stockholm
TENARIS - TERNIUM Production DB Les Films de lequinoxe. Fonds
ORGANIZACIN TECHINT Iara Freiberg photographique Denise Bellon
IUAM Indiana University Art Museum, Bloomington.
- Exhibition Design
Partial gift of William H. Conroys wife
Secretara de Cultura de la Caruso-Torricella MD Marcel Duchamp
Presidencia de la Nacin architetti, Milan-Paris MMVP Muse dArt Moderne de la Ville de Paris
- Preparators MNCP Muse National dArt Moderne
1990 Centre Pompidou, Paris - Centre de Cration
Ministerio de Cultura del Sergio Avello
Industrielle - Achat 1990
Gobierno de la Ciudad Gisela Korth MNCP Muse National dArt Moderne
Autnoma de Buenos Aires Lighting 2005 Centre Pompidou, Paris - Centre de Cration
- Matteo Fiore Industrielle Dpt du Sige national du
Parti Comuniste franais, 2005
Embajada de Francia en Didactics
P.c Private Collection
la Argentina Rodrigo Alonso PMA Philadelphia Museum of Art
Cintia Mezza RS Roger Schall, Paris
Graphic Design S.MD Succession Marcel Duchamp Villiers
sous Grez, France
Guillermo Goldschmidt
ZB Cortesa Zabriskie Gallery
Jorge Lewis
Laura Escobar
Assistants
Malvina Bali
Andrea Cavalletti
Andrea Rocchi
Fundacin Proa
Av. Pedro de Mendoza 1929
[C1169AAD] Buenos Aires
Argentina
[54-11] 4104-1000
www.proa.org
info@proa.org
The exhibition original pieces of carefully crafted painting and their challenge to the very foundations
Elena Filipovic, Curator or sculpture to be looked at. The invention of of art, then and still to this day.
the readymade was not, however, Duchamps Marcel Duchamp: A work that is not a
Marcel Duchamp: A work that is not a only groundbreaking gesture in this same work of art brings to Latin America many
work of art takes its title from a question period: among other activities, he invented rare and exceptional works for an historic
that Marcel Duchamp wrote down one day a new system of measurement, declaring the event possible thanks to loans from major
in 1913: Can one make works that are not experiment art, he created multiple photo- museums and Private collections, including
of art? The question announced a radical graphic copies of his notes, he used chance to the Philadelphia Art Museum, the Moderna
shift in the practice of the Frenchman, who make music, and he first used photography Museet in Stockholm, and the Duchamp
had mostly been a painter until that time: and perspective to redefine paintingall Estate in France.
it signaled the beginning of his defiance between 1913 and 1914. And over the years,
of traditional ideas of what counts as an Duchamp continued his diverse experi-
artwork and it laid the foundations for what ments, many represented in this exhibition
would make him the most influential artist (in some cases through studies, replicas, or
of twentieth and twenty-first centuries. reconstructions).
His insistent rethinking of the work of The presentation of the selected art-
art is the focus of this first-ever major solo works on display structures made up of jag-
presentation of Duchamp in Latin America, ged, irregular lines and offering no singular,
featuring 123 pieces of each form of media fixed, or chronological path, underlines
the artist worked in from 1913 to the end of the way in which traditional notions like
his life. continuity and aesthetic progress make
The exhibition begins with the moment little sense in relation to Duchamps oeuvre.
when Duchamp wrote his famous question, Instead the pieces are organized in group-
which coincides with the period in which he ings that reveal the connections between
began to conceive of mass-produced ready- and the persistent return of such seem-
made objects as potential artworks by sim- ingly diverse preoccupations in Duchamps
ply being selected by the artist (an ordinary work as readymades, optics, perspective,
bottle-drying rack he bought at a local hard- transparency, chance, humor, reproduction,
ware store, for example). The gesture marked performativity, erotics, and display. In so do-
a revolution in art history by refusing the ing, the exhibition points to the complexity
idea that art could only be unique and of a set of central ideas in Duchamps oeuvre,
Room
Readymades questioned the definitions of the work of art
In 1913, Duchamp attached a bicycle wheel and the role of the institutions that judge
to a stool and watched it spin in his studio. them. The history of art would be changed

2
Two years later, he gave it and objects like it forever by the gesture.
(a bottle dryer, a snow shovel, among others) None of the original readymades exist
a name: readymade. Those industrially today as all were lost, thrown away, or
produced items became artworks by being broken in their early years of existence; only
chosen by the artist and extracted from replicas that Duchamp made and authorized
their function as useful things. Their during his lifetime are shown in museums
selection was not supposed to be subjective and exhibitions around the world. On view
and was instead guided by the beauty of here are various replicas of the readymades
indifference, thus taking art out of the that the artist made in 1964.
aesthetic realm and out of a question of
either good or bad taste. By being mass-
produced and able to be duplicated, they
could avoid what the artist called the cult of
uniqueness, of art with a capital A.
With the readymade, Duchamp proposed
that the creative act did not lie anymore in
the crafting of an object or in that objects
singular originality, but rather in its
selection and in its transfer from everyday
life to theart worldthrough the signature
of the artist, its title, and its display in an
art institution. Fountain, the name he gave
to the porcelain urinal that he signed with
the pseudonym R. Mutt and attempted to
exhibit at the Society of Independent Artists
Exhibition of 1917, was rejected for not
being art. It went on to become, in time, the
most famous example of the way Duchamp
1 Fountain, 1917 / 1964. 7 Roue de bicyclette (Bicycle Wheel), 14 Box of 1914, 1913-14. Commercial
Porcelain urinal, 1913 / 1964. Metal wheel mounted cardboard photographic
36 x 48 x 61 cm, C.LZ on painted wood stool supply box containing photographic
126.3 x 64.1 x 32 cm, IUAM facsimiles of 16 manuscript notes,
2 Marcel Duchamp, Beatrice Wood 3.8 x 25.1 x 19.9 cm, PMA. Gift of Mme.
and Henri-Pierre Roch The Blind 8 Trbuchet (Trap), 1917 / 1964. Marcel Duchamp, 1991
Man, No. 2, New York, May 1917. C.DF Wood and metal coat rack,
18.9 x 100 x 12 cm, IUAM 15 Marcel Duchamp (Reconstruction
3 Alfred Stieglitz, Photograph of by Jean-Hubert Martin and Julio
Fountain, 1917. 9 A bruit secret (With Hidden Noise), Villani), Sculpture de voyage
Vintage gelatin silver print, 1916 / 1964. Ball of twine, brass (Sculpture for Travelling),
23,5 x 18 cm, S.MD plates, metal, screws and paint 1918 / 2008. Wool strong, pins,
11.4 x 13 x 13 cm, IUAM plastic bathing caps, dimensions
4 Porte-bouteilles ou Schoir variable, P.c
bouteilles (Bottle Dryer) ca. 10 Pliant de voyage (Travelers
1921. Galvanizad iron, Folding Item), 1916 / 1964. 16 Man Ray, Ombres portes de
50 x 33 cm, P.c Varnished cloth Underwood readymades, 1917. Vintage gelatin
typewriter cover, 23 x 43 x 5 cm, C.LZ silver print, 6,1 x 3,9 cm, C.LZ
5 Porte-bouteilles ou Schoir
bouteilles (Bottle Dryer), 11 Why Not Sneeze Rrose Slavy?,
1914 / 1964. Galvanized iron bottle 1921. Thermometer, cuttlebone,
dryer, 59 x 36.8 cm, IUAM and 152 marble cubes in the shape of
sugar lumps in a small birdcage,
6 In Advance of the Broken Arm, 13.5 x 24 x 18.7 cm, C.LZ
1915 / 1964. Aluminum, sheet metal
and wood, 121.3 x 35.2 x 8.9 cm, IUAM 12 Man Ray, Why Not Sneeze Rrose
Slavy?, 1921. Vintage gelatin silver
print, 23 x 18 cm, C.LZ

13 Possible, 1913 / 1958.


Facsimile of one of MDs notes,
32.5 x 25 cm, C.LZ
Transparency / Perspective 17 Piston de courant dair (Draught 25 MD or Katherine Dreier, A regarder
Duchamps intense reading of 17 th century Pistons), 1914 / 1965. Print on (lautre cte du verre) dun oeil, de
perspectival and scientific treatises deeply celluloid, 29.9 x 23.7 cm, C.LZ prs, pendant presque une heure (To
informed his production starting in the 1910s. Be Looked at (from the Other Side of
18 Piston de courant dair (Draught the Glass) with One Eye, Close to,
Combining an interest in optics, geometry,
Pistons), 1914. Gelatin silver print, for Almost an Hour), 1918.
and perspective, he used classical perspective 58.8 x 50 cm, P.c Vintage gelatin silver print,
to test out the possibility of representing 7,5 x 8,8 cm, C.LZ
the 3rd and 4th dimension onto flat, often 19 Fresh Widow, 1920 / 1964. Miniature
transparent, surfaces. The results of this reproduction with wood stand and
experimentation are seen most clearly in his covered with leather,
studies for and final rendition of the Large 77.5 x 45 cm, C.LZ
Glass. Indeed veils, diaphanous materials,
20 Air de Paris (50cc of Paris Air),
and glass appear everywhere in Duchamps 1919 / 1964 Glass ampoule,
works over the years: from the dotted mesh 14.5 x 8.5 cm, C.LZ
he used to make Draft Pistons, to the glass
and Kodac lens in To be looked at , to the 21 Apolinre Enameled, 1917 / 1964.
shadows cast on a wall from his ready-mades, Paint and pencil on cardboard,
to the webbing of string in his Sculpture for 24.4 x 33.9 cm, P.c
Traveling, to the water and gas of Duchamps
22 Peigne (Comb), 1916 / 1964. Steel
Bride. Instead of focusing vision on the
comb, with box comprised of wood and
surface, transparent materials allow the felt, 7.9 x 18.4 cm, IUAM
gaze to traverse it and thus include, as part
of the visible image, whatever happens 23 Transition, No. 26, New York, Winter
to be behind the glass (or gas or smoke or 1937. Cover of the magazine by MD,
shadow) at the time. More than that, when 21.5 x 15.5 cm, P.c
light passes through glass, for instance, an
24 Suzanne Duchamp / Jean J. Crotti,
image painted on it can be projected into the
Marcel Duchamps Unhappy Readymade,
space of the room, exhibition space, or view in c. 1919-1920. Vintage gelatin
front of which it might stand, bringing the flat silver print, 11 x 7 cm PMA. Gift of
second dimension into the realm of the third Virginia and William Camfield, 1983
dimension.
Large Glass enigmatic visual epic of failing machinery 30 La Marie mise nu par ses
Its first perspectival sketches date to and frustrated sexuality.Now permanently Clibataires, mme (Marcel
1913 but Duchamp actually began the installed in the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Coloravit) (The Bride Stripped
physical labor in 1915 on what would be the Large Glass was replicated in several Bare By Her Bachelors, Even [Marcel
Coloravit]), 1958. Hand colored
considered by many as his magnum opus life-size copies, including the one shown in
photograph in a cardboard stand
before abandoning it in 1923, when he this exhibition. created by MD, signed 8 times at the
considered that it had reached a final bottom, in white ink, pencil and red
stage of incompletion [definitivement pencil, protected with glass, on two
inachev]. La Marie mise nu par ses 26 MD (Rplica de Ulf Linde, Henrik metal bases as stands
clibataires, meme, also known as the Samuelsson y John Stenborg), 30.8 x 21.2 cm, P.c
La Marie mise nu par ses
Large Glass, is the name Duchamp gave
Clibataires, mme [The Large 31 MD (Replica by Richard Hamilton),
to his transparent precision painting Glass], 1915-23 / 1991-92. Oculist Witnesses, 1914-15 / 1968.
made of such uncommon materials as lead Oil and lead wire on glass Silvered mirror on laminated glass
wire and dust as well as oil and varnish, 321 x 204,3 x 111,7 cm, C.MM with metal base, 63.5 x 51 cm
mounted between glass and divided onto PMA. Gift of Edna and Stanley C.
two panels placed above one another. 27 La Marie mise nu par ses Tuttlemann, 1994
Constructed in the same period that the Clibataires, mme (The Bride
Stripped Bare By Her Bachelors, 32 MD (Replica by Richard Hamilton,
artist was selecting readymade objects,
Even) [first perspectival drawing signed daprs Marcel Duchamp),
and involving the results of his research on
of The Large Glass], 1913. Pencil on Sieves, 1914-15 / 1968. Screenprint
perspective, optics, chance, and time, the tracing cloth, 30.5 x 24.5 cm, P.c on laminated glass, 63.5 x 51 cm, P.c
massive and complex glasswork departs
considerably from traditional painting. 28 MD and Man Ray, Elevage de poussire 33 Nine Malic Moulds, 1914-15 / 1938-64.
The Large Glass was only finished when (Dust Breeding), 1920 / 1964. Miniature on celluloid encased in a
it cracked during transportation in 1926, Gelatin silver print, wooden frame, 16.8 x 27.3 cm, former
after which Duchamp decided that the 24 x 30.5 cm, P.c collection Julien Levy, C.DF
accident was part of the work. The hundreds
29 Man Ray, Oculist Witnesses, 1920.
of notes Duchamp scribbled to accompany Vintage gelatin silver
it are necessary to decipher its story of an print, 23 x 18 cm, C.LZ
unattainable Bride in the top panel and the
bevy of Bachelors below and the gasses,
fluids, and devices that circulate in this
Chance / Chess / Humor 34 Erratum Musical, 1913 / 1934. 41 Anonymous, Portrait of Marcel
Humor, game-playing, chess, and chance Reproduction of original Duchamp in his studio, 1945.
frequently turn up in Duchamps work, musical score on double sheet of Vintage gelatin silver print,
bringing lightness to an oeuvre that so music paper, 48 x 38 cm, C.LZ 25.3 x 20.4 cm, C.FK
many would like to incorrectly think of as
35 3 stoppages talon (3 Standard 42 Pocket Chess Set, 1943. Leather
completely serious and coldly conceptual. Stoppages), 1913-14 / 1964. pocket chessboard, celluloid, pins,
The laws of chance were used in many Box with wood pieces, 129,2 x 28 cm, 16 x 10.5 cm (closed), 16 x 22 cm, P.c
pieces, including in his musical composition and 119.4 x 6.1; 109.1 x 6.2;
Erratum Musical and 3 stoppages talon. 109.8 x 6.3 each piece, C.LZ 43 MD and Vitaly Halberstadt,
His creation of a hand-made fake check LOpposition et les cases conjuges
to pay his dentist Tzank Chque or a 36 Obligations pour la Roulette de sont reconcilies, Bruselas,
Monte-Carlo (Monte Carlo Bond), 1924. LEchequier, 1932.
photocollaged bond for his gambling
Photocollage on letterpress, Book about chess, 35 x 25 cm, P.c
business Monte-Carlo Bond hint at the ways 31.5 x 19.5 cm, P.c
Duchamp played with arts relationship to 44 Man Ray, Vitaly Halberstadt and MD,
commodification. For him, chess escaped 37 Man Ray, Chque Tzanck (dentiste), ca. 1932. Vintage gelatin silver
this conundrum, I am still a victim of 1919. Vintage gelatin silver print, print, 18 x 23 cm, C.LZ
chess. It has all the beauty of artand much 23 x 18 cm, C.LZ
more. It cannot be commercialized he 45 Anonymous, Duchamp in Buenos Aires,
once said, perhaps explaining why he spent 38 Shigeko Kubota, Marcel Duchamp and 1918-1919. Vintage gelatin silver
John Cage, 1970. Limited edition book print, 16 x 18,3 cm, P.c
so much time playing it. It was a subject
including a 33 1/3 phonograph, with a
of many of his pieces, and when he was in sound recording of Reunion, the 1968 46 Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray playing
Buenos Aires during his chess maniac chess match between MD and John Cage chess, Paris, 1926. Scene from Ren
period, he even carved a set of chess pieces 22.2 x 16.3 x 2 cm, P.c Clairs film Entracte (1924),
with only the more complicated knights 16mm film transferred to DVD, black
made by a local cabinetmaker, Buenos Aires 39 Buenos Aires Chess Pieces, 1918- and white, silent, 22 minutes, short
Chess Set. 1919. Set of 32 wooden chess pieces, film fragment featuring MD projected
between 10,3 y 6,3 cm high, P.c in a loop

40 Anonymous, MD in his studio, pipe


in hand, 1945. Gelatin silver print,
25.2 x 18.9 cm, C.FK
Room
Optics 47 MD (Replica by Per Olof Ultvedt and
Duchamp tried to save art from what he Magnus Wibom), Rotary Glass Plates
called the retinal, that long-standing (Precision Optics), 1920 / 1961. Metal
frame, motor, glass plates, paint,

3
emphasis on the purely visual aspect of
plexiglass, 146 x 202 x 116 cm
art. He insisted instead that artistic value
C.MM. Gift from Per Olof Ultvedt,
stemmed from conceptual as much asif Magnus Wibom, and Pontus Hulten,
not more thanvisual perception. This 1961
thinking led him, paradoxically, to intense
experiments on the manipulation of vision. 48 Man Ray, Atelier Marcel Duchamp,
In the 1920s and 30s, Duchamp constructed 1920. Vintage gelatin silver print,
several quite elaborate optical machines, 12 x 10 cm, P.c
calling them precision optics, and also
49 Man Ray, Marcel Duchamp with Rotary
made one film, Anmic Cinma, and aborted Glass Plates (Precision Optics),
another for which only 2 stereoscopic film 1920. Vintage gelatin silver print
frames remain. He followed this with the 23,3 x 18 cm, C.LZ
official patenting of his Rotoreliefs in 1935,
consisting of colored discs with graphic 50 Man Ray, Rotative Demi-Sphere, 1925.
geometrical designs, which Duchamp Vintage gelatin silver
presented at a trade fair where inventors print, 23 x 17,5 cm, S.MD
presented their discoveries. These, like his
51 MD and Man Ray, Frames from a
other optical devices, produce a hypnotic Projected Stereoscopic Film,
illusion of space and depth that suggests 1920 / 1973. Edition of a stereoscopic
expanding movement and three-dimensional image with green and red spirals on
space when set on motion. With them, two negatives, fitted in a wood case,
Duchamp not only blurs the border between 11 x 24.8 x 17 cm, C.LZ
scientific invention and art object, but also
52 Mantlepiece in Cadaqus, 1968.
reveals his keen preoccupation with how we
Two photograms mounted on carton,
perceive forms, motion, and, ultimately, the and two photographs composing two
work of art. handmade stereopticon slides;
1st. group 7 x 10.2 cm each; 2nd.
group 23 x 18.5 cm each, C.LZ
53 MD, Man Ray and Marc Allgret, Eroticism Performativity
Anmic Cinma, 1925-1926. Film Duchamp often called eroticism the basis of In 1920, Duchamp decided he wanted to
transferred to DVD, 7 minutes, P.c everything and the single most important create an alter-ego for himself, posing in
influence on his work. Indeed, the name make-up, a womans hat and fur coat for
54 William Copley, S.M.S., New York,
of his female alter ego, Rrose Slavy, who his friend Man Rays camera to consecrate
April 2, 1968. Magazine published by
William Copley with cover designed made her debut in 1920, is based on the his incarnation as Rrose Slavy. She not
by MD, 27.5 x 17.5cm, P.c phrase Eros cest la vie (Eros is life). This only appeared in photographs, but also
eroticism took many different formsfrom signed her name to a book of lewd puns,
55 Minotaure, Vol. 2, No. 6, Paris, Duchamps early paintings that take the was the declared author of Anmic Cinma,
Winter 1934-1935. Magazine with front theme of the virgin Bride as their subject, to and, much later, appeared as a mannequin
and back covers designed by MD, the provocative, molded objects like Feuille in the 1938 Exposition International du
32.5 x 26 cm, C.DF
de vigne femelle and Coin de chastet that Surralisme, wearing Duchamps jacket and
56 Cahiers dArt, Vol. 11, No. 1-2,
he made in the 1950s while he was secretly shoes with her name signed at her naked
Paris, 1936. Cover of the magazine by building his massive erotic tableau, Etant crotch. Duchamp made an appearance as
MD, 31.5 x 24.5 cm, P.c donns Perhaps the most complex and one other female just long enough for Man
cryptic manifestation of Duchamps interest Ray to create the ideal marketing photograph
57 Rotoreliefs (Optical disks), 1935 / in eros, however, can be found in his notes to grace the outside of Duchamps unique
1965. Set of 6 cardboard disks (from for The Large Glass, which describe the creation of a perfume bottle, Belle Haleine:
the 1963 edition), printed on both relationship of sexual desire and unrequited Eau de violette. This performative side to
sides in color offset lithography,
love between a motor/Bride and her nine Duchamps workthe confusion of male-
mounted on a wooden box covered in
velvet, motor 220v. (5 replicas + 1 masturbating molds/Bachelors. female roles, the playfulness, and the
original exhibited), P.c implicit eroticismpresent throughout his
oeuvre is also visible in Duchamps one
theatrical appearance as Adam stripped
bare in Rene Clairs Relche in 1924.
58 L.H.O.O.Q., 1919 / 1930. Pencil on 66 Couple of Laundress Aprons, 1959. 71 Man Ray, Marcel Duchamp as Belle
printed reproduction of Leonardo Da Two potholders (male and female) Haleine, 1921. Vintage gelatin silver
Vincis Mona Lisa 61.5 x 49.5 cm, print made of cloth and fur, 20.3 x 17.7 and print, 17,5 x 12,5 cm, P.c
48 x 33 cm, MNCP 2005 20.5 x 19.8 cm, P.c
72 Man Ray, Portrait of Rrose Slavy?,
59 Feuille de vigne femelle (Female Fig 67 lInfinitif [The White Box], 1967. 1921 / 1924-25. Gelatin silver print
Leaf) [paper reproduction], 1966. Plexiglass covered box containing with cut corners, hand-retouched
Hand-colored carton cut-out envelopes with 79 facsimile notes with black ink and pencil by MD,
10.5 x 15.5 cm, C.LZ dating from 1912-23, 7.6 x 33.3 13.5 x 10.7 cm, P.c
x 29.2 cm, P.c
60 Coin de chastet (Wedge of Chastity), 73 Raoul Ubac, Mannequin surraliste
1954. Two part sculpture: Galvanized 68 MD and Georges Hugnet, Non Vouloir, (Rrose Slavy, mannequin dressed
plaster for the wedge and dental no. 4, Paris, 1941. Publication by Marcel Duchamp), 1938. Gelatin
plastic for the lower part, including MDs frontispiece, silver print 23.2 x 17.2cm Muse dArt
6 x 8.6 x 4.2 cm, P.c mustache, and beard of L.H.O.O.Q. Moderne de la Ville de Paris
9.5 x 14.6 cm, P.c
61 Object-dard (Dart-Object), 1951. 74 Maya Deren, Storefront of the Gotham
Galvanized plaster with inlaid lead 69 L.H.O.O.Q. 1919 / 1964. Pencil on Book Mart, New York. MD working for
rib, 7.5 x 20.1 x 6 cm, P.c printed reproduction of Leonardo Da the presentation of Arcane 17, 1945.
Vincis Mona Lisa; printed lettering Gelatin silver print, 25.5 x 21cm, BK
62 Feuille de vigne femelle (Female Fig obscured in white gouache. Inscribed
Leaf), 1950. Painted plaster, bottom center, below printed title 75 Maya Deren, Storefront of the Gotham
9 x 14 x 12.5 cm, P.c La Joconde, in pencil: L.H.O.O.Q., Book Mart, New York, 1945. Gelatin
edition of 38 replicas printed to silver print, 11.7 x 18.7 cm, BK
63 Moule pices pour Feuille de be inserted in Pierre de Massots
vigne femelle (Mold in pieces for Marcel Duchamp, propos et souvenirs 76 Maya Deren, Storefront of the Gotham
Female Fig Leaf), 1950-51. Plaster 30.1 x 23 cm, P.c Book Mart, New York, 1945. Gelatin
mold in 5 pieces, 13.5 x 27 x 23.5 cm, silver print, 15,7 x 12 cm, BK
MNCP 1990 70 Man Ray, Untitled [Photograph of MD
and Bronja Perlmutter as Adam and 77 The Bec Auer, 1968. Copper etching on
65 Marcel Duchamp and Mimi Parent, Eve in Relche], 1924. Japan vellum 50.5 x 32.5 cm, P.c
Bote Alerte!, 1959. Catalogue for Vintage gelatin silver print,
the 1959 Exposition Internationale 25.7 x 20 cm, C.LZ
du Surralisme, 25 x 21 cm, P.c
78 Eau et gaz tous les tages, 83 Andr Breton, Yves Tanguy par Andr Originality/ Reproduction
1958. Linen-covered box with loose Breton, 1946. Book published by the Throughout his life, Duchamp questioned the
reproductions of MD, 35 x 26.8 x 8 cm, Pierre Matisse Gallery, New York. idea that something could only be considered
P.c Design and typography by MD, an artwork by being unique and auratic.
35 x 22.8cm P.c
He did this by elevating ready-made store
79 Charles Henri Ford, View, vol. 5,
no. 1, New York, March 1945. Magazine 84 Bouche-vier, 1964 / 1967. bought items to the status of art but also by
with cover by MD, 30.5 x 23 cm, P.c Polished bronze sink stopper blurring the distinction between the copy
Edition of 100 copies 7.5 cm. and the original. In 1919, he bought a cheap
80 Andr Breton, Young Cherry Trees diameter x 0.5 thick, C.DF reproduction of Leonardo Da Vincis Mona
Secured Against Hares,New York, Lisa on which he drew a moustache and a
1946. Text by Andr Breton; cover and 85 Study for The Bride in tant beard and added his own signature and a
jacket design by MD, 24 x 16 cm, P.c donns: 1. La chute deau / 2. Le gaz
new title, L.H.O.O.Q. In 1931, he famously
dclairage (Given: 1. The Waterfall
81 David Hare, VVV, Almanac for 1943, / 2. The Illuminating Gas), 1950.
repeated the gesture, thus turning mass
no. 2-3, New York, 1943. Magazine Gouache on transparent perforated reproductions of one of art historys most
with special issue by Andr Breton, plexiglas 91.3 x 55.9 cm, C.JMM famous artworks into iconic, multiple, signed
MD, and Max Ernst. Cover by MD with Duchampian originals. Even before that
chicken wire and cardboard cut out though, in 1913, Duchamp began what would
28.5 x 22 x 1.5cm, C.DF be a long effort to copy his own entire artistic
output, first in the form of the photographs
82 David Hare, VVV, Almanac for 1943,
that Duchamp took of his notes, collected in
no. 2-3, New York, 1943. Magazine
with special issue by Andr Breton, the Box of 1914. Then, for most of the 1930s,
MD, and Max Ernst. Cover by MD with he was busy making exact facsimiles of his
chicken wire and cardboard cut out scribbled notes, collecting them in the so-
28.5 x 22 x 1.5cm, C.LZ called Green Box. Immediately after this,
he turned to making a portable museum,
La Bote-en-valise, with miniature copies
of almost every artwork he had ever made.
Duchamp took great pains to craft 300 tiny
porcelain urinals or reduced-size versions
of his Large Glass on celluloid, often
using obsolete artisanal methods to make
paradoxically hand-made reproductions. And 86 Miniature of La Marie Reproduction 92 The Large Glass [miniature
during the process, Duchamp issued several of Marie (1912), 1937. Collotype reproduction], 1944. Pochoir on
of the reproductions, miniature copies of reproduction on paper, with a postage celuloide, mounted between two
Marie or Nude Descending a Staircase, for stamp signed by MD at the bottom glass pieces on a wooden base
33,8 x 19,5 cm, C.DF 37,5 x 23,5 cm, P.c
instance, as new bonafide artworks in their
own right. As if to confuse the line between 87 Miniature of La Marie Reproduction 93 Man Ray? Fotografas de la Bote-
original and copy further, each of the deluxe of Marie (1912), 1937. Collotype en-valise de Marcel Duchamp, 1941.
models made for special friends and patrons reproduction on paper, varnished and Vintage gelatin silver print
included one original artwork fitted on the attached to canvas 30,5 x 20,5 cm, 23 x 18 cm, C.LZ
inside of the suitcase, like the self-portrait C.DF
composed of hair he made for Roberto 94 De ou par Marcel Duchamp ou Rrose
88 Miniature of Nu descendant un Slavy, [Bote-en-valise],
Mattas Bote-en-valise. Finally, in the 1950s
escalier, 1937. Brass printing plates 1935-41 / 1946. (Box-in-a-valise)
and 1960s, he made multiple editions of used to make the reproduction of Nu Bote-en-valise series A. Deluxe
replicas of his original readymades. Thus, descendant un escalier n 2 (1912) edition: XIII/XX, red leather valise
until the very end, the effort he began in the 29,5 x 20,5 cm, C.DF filled with 69 items and one original
1910s to shake the distinctions between the inscribed to Roberto Matta
original and the copyand the institutions 89 Miniature of Nu descendant un 41 x 38.5 x 9.8 cm, P.c
like the museum meant to uphold these escalier Reproduction of 1937. of Nu
distinctionscontinued. descendant un escalier n 2 (1912). 95 La Marie mise nu par ses
Collotype reproduction on paper, Clibataires, mme (The Bride
varnished and attached to canvas 34 Stripped Bare By Her Bachelors,
x 20,5 cm, C.DF Even [The Green Box]), 1934. Green-
flocked cardboard box containing
90 Air de Paris (50cc. of Paris Air), 93 facsimile notes, drawings, and
1919 / 1939. Glass miniature of the photographs by MD. Deluxe edition
original, made for the Bote-en- of 20 copies bears MD in copper on
valise 4 x 2.5 x 2.5 cm, C.DF outside and contains one original
note 33.2 x 28 x 2.5 cm C.LZ
91 Fountain [first cast porcelain
miniature model of urinal for the
Bote-en-valise, inscribed
R.MUTT / 1917], 1938 Glazed porcelain
and paint 7.6 x 5.8 x 4.5 cm P.c
room
96 La Marie mise nu par ses Duchamp as curator
Clibataires, mme (The Bride Crucial to Duchamps practice lies a
Stripped Bare By Her Bachelors, preoccupation with the exhibition and
Even [The Green Box]), 1934. Green-

4
displayhow objects occupy space, how
flocked cardboard box containing
they transform and are transformed by their
93 facsimile notes, drawings, and
photographs by MD. Edition of 300 context, and how they shift or condition
copies 33.2 x 28 x 2.5 cm, P.c desire and perception. A tribute to what
could be called his role in them as curator
97 Green Box Papers (Original Plates), culminates this exhibition even as it reveals
1934-35. Printing plates used to concerns that were present throughout his
make the facsimiles contained in entire oeuvrefrom his 1910s positioning
The Green Box 68 x 46 x 7.5 cm, P.c
of readymade objects in his apartment, to
98 Some French Moderns Says McBride,
his design of the exhibition spaces from
1922 Texts and compilation by Henry the 1930s to 60s for the Surrealists, to
McBride. Layout and design by MD, his creation of portable museums of his
30 x 25.5 x 3 cm, C.LZ artworks, to his final project for a museum,
Etant donns, 1 la chute deau, 2le gaz
99 Some French Moderns Says McBride, dclairage.
1922. Texts and compilation by
Henry McBride. Layout and design by
19351942: Bote-en-valise
MD, 30 x 25.5 x 3 cm, S.MD
Overlapping with his designing of exhibition
100 Anonymous? Frederick Kiesler? spaces for the Surrealists, Duchamp
Cut out of MD hand print, 1945. conceived of a project to produce 300 copies
Photogram 21.5 x 18 cm, C.FK of a miniature exhibition of nearly his entire
artistic output. For it, he made elaborate and
101 Self-Portrait in Profile, 1957 painstaking copies on paper and miniature
/ 1967. Serigraph of original
sculptural replicas of what he considered
collage, Sheet 29.5 x 23 cm Image
14.9 x 12.8 cm, C.DF
his major artworks (including the Large
Glass, Fountain, and the Nude Descending
a Staircase), gathering them into a complex
architecture in a box. Calling it his portable
museum, Duchamp took on the role of 19171918: Duchamps Atelier. 33 West 103 Henri Pierre Roch, Untitled [Series
curator, envisioning the display systems, 67th Street. of 7 photographs of Marcel Duchamps
museum-like labels for each reproduction, One could say that Duchamps studio was, studio, 33 West 67th Street, New
and creating deliberate connections between throughout his life, a place not only of artistic York], 19161918 Vintage gelatin
silver prints 4.2 x 6.8 cm each, P.c
the artworks through their order and display. production but also of experimentation
The thoroughly modern idea of reproducing and display. Photographs of one of his early 104 Henri Pierre Roch, Untitled [Marcel
his artworks in a mini retrospective extends studio spaces at 33 West 67 th Street in Duchamps studio at 33 West 67th
Duchamps insistent questioning throughout New York reveal, for instance, that in the Street, New York], 19171918
his oeuvre of authorship, authenticity, and period in which Duchamp is inventing Vintage gelatin silver print
conventional exhibition displays. the readymades, a shiny porcelain urinal 6.9 x 8.2 cm, S.MD
was hung over a doorway, a coat rack was
105 Untitled [suite of three studies
nailed to floor, and a bicycle wheel spun on
102 De ou par Marcel Duchamp ou Rrose for Trbuchet for the Bote-en-
a stool in the middle of the room. His atelier valise], 1917-1918 / 1940. One
Slavy, [Bote-en-valise] 1935-41 / appeared to be in careless disorder but the
1966-1971. Bote-en-valise series retouched photograph, including a
placement of some utilitarian objects was line drawing; Trbuchet printed
D. Outside green linen, contains 68
items Edition of 30 boxes 41.6 x 38.5 highly meaningful. By testing out ways of on gummed paper, cut out and
displaying the mass-produced objects so that inserted; one proof with pochoir
x 9.9 cm, ex-col. Andy Warhol, P.c
their use value was denied, and their role as coloring labeled mdele Retouched
objects to be noticedeven contemplated photograph 19 x 26.6 cm, line drawing
7.5 x 11.2 cm, gummed paper 12 x 21.4
was emphasized, Duchamp turned his studio
cm (TBC); proof 12 x 21.4 cm, S.MD
space into a kind of primordial space of
exhibition.
Years later, when he wanted to repro-
duce an image his readymade Trbuchet
[trap, also meaning to trip], for instance,
he turned to a photo he had of his New York
studio and manipulated it so as to under-
score the distinctive strangeness of the posi-
tioning of the readymade on the floorwhich
is, after all, what made an ordinary coat rack
into a trap to be tripped over.
1938: Exposition internationale 106 Roger Schall, Installation views 1942: First Papers of Surrealism
du surralisme of the exhibition, 1938 / c. 1950. October 14-November 7, 1942 Whitelaw Reid
January 17-February 24, 1938 Contact sheet with gelatin silver Mansion. 451 Madison Avenue, New York
Galerie Beaux-Arts. 140, rue du Faubourg prints, printed later 30 x 40 cm, RS After having arrived in New York from war-
Saint-Honor, Paris torn France with many emigrating artists,
107 Anonymous, Untitled [Visitors
For the first Exposition internationale du viewing works by flashlight at the Duchamp was asked by Andr Breton to again
surralisme to be held in Paris, Surrealist Exposition, 1938. Gelatin silver design the space of a Surrealist exhibition.
leaders Andr Breton and Paul Eluard asked print 14.6 x 10.5 cm, Courtesy ZG Called First Papers of Surrealism, a sly
Marcel Duchamp to design the exhibition reference to the immigration papers that the
space. Duchamp didnt belong to the Surrealist 108 Denise Bellon, Installation view of artists had to file upon entering the US, the
movement but he did often agree to show the exhibition, 1938 / 2004. Gelatin show was meant to benefit the French Relief
silver print, printed later, format
his art in their group shows and, for the Society. In response to the invitation and
24 x 30 cm, image 21.5 x 22.5 cm, DB
first time on this occasion he played the role the meager means at his disposal, Duchamp
of generator-arbitrator of ideas for the 109 Denise Bellon, Installation view of devised a very simple but striking exhibition
exhibition. The result was no ordinary hanging the exhibition, 1938 / 1980 Gelatin design that can not help make one think
of paintings on the wall. Duchamp turned silver print, printed later, format of many of Duchamps previous artworks,
the posh interior of the Galerie Beaux-Arts in 24 x 30cm, image 21.5 x 22.5cm, DB including the lines of cracks in his Large
to a grotto-like environment. He hung 1200 Glass or the suspended lines of Sculpture for
coal sacks over the entire ceiling, installed Traveling. For the exhibition, he installed the
department store revolving doors in the center exhibitions paintings on free-standing white
of the exhibition rooms, and turned out the panels and then suspended a web of ordinary
lights in the space. Duchamps transformations store-bought string across and throughout
inspired other artists to carpet the floor with the elegantly gilded space. The string criss-
dirt and dead leaves, to create a small marsh crossed in front of and between the artworks,
in the center of one room, and install a row of blocking access to them, much to the dismay
mannequins, each dressed by the participating of many participating artists. For the opening
artists, along the entrance corridor. For the night, Duchamp asked some children to play
opening, visitors brought into the darkened ball in the middle of the exhibition during
space made their way through the exhibition the opening. When they were asked to stop
and could view the artworks by the light of or questioned, they had been instructed to
flashlights handed out at the entrance. answer: Marcel Duchamp said it was all right.
110 First Papers of Surrealism, New 1947: Le Surralisme en 1947 116 Willy Maywald, Installation view of
York, 1942. Catalogue to accompany July 7-September 30, 1947 Frederick Kieslers Anti-Tabu with
the exhibition, 26.6 x 18.4 cm, C.DF Galerie Maeght. 13, rue de Teheran, Paris MDs Le Rayon vert, 1947. Gelatin
For Le Surralisme en 1947, held at the silver print
111 Anonymous, Untitled [Swiss cheese], 26.8 x 23.5 cm, C.FK
Galerie Maeght in Paris and marking the
1942. Vintage gelatin silver print
used in the exhibition catalogue Surrealists return to Europe after the war, 117 Denise Bellon, Detail of Le Rayon
cover, 25 x 20 cm, C.DF Andr Breton turned to Duchamp once again vert by MD, Galerie Maeght, Paris,
to conceive of the design of the exhibition 1947. Gelatin silver print 18 x 24.5
112 John D. Schiff, Installation space. Although he remained in New York, cm, DB
view of the exhibition showing Duchamp conceived of an exhibition space
Duchamps Sixteen Miles of String that included a room with alters designed 118 Willy Maywald, Installation view
Installation, 1942. Gelatin silver of MDs altar Refaire le pass, 1947.
by participating artists, a Billiard table and
print 19.3 x 25.4 cm, PMA. Donacin Gelatin silver print,
de Jacqueline, Paul y Peter
continuously falling water in the middle 29.5 x 23.5 cm, C.FK
Matisse en memoria de su madre of one of the rooms, and green fabric lined
Alexina Duchamp walls throughout. His own contribution
included one of the alters and, Le Rayon
113 Arnold Newman, MD, 1942. Gelatin vert [The Green Ray], a peephole through
silver print 24.1 x 15.8cm, PMA which one could see an optical illusion,
Donacin de R. Sturgis y Marion B. although most visitors didnt notice the
F. Ingersoll, 1945
hole in the wall at all. Architect Frederick
114 Frederick Kiesler, Du mirage des Kiesler and painter Roberta Matta went
rseaux circomflexes en peinture, to Paris to execute the design. From New
1945. Pull-out page from View York, Duchamp designed the unusual cover
magazine, special MD issue (2 copies for the deluxe edition of the catalogue,
exhibited), 30.5 x 22.5 cm, C.FK hand-painting 999 false foam breasts and
attaching them with velvet to the catalogue
115 Maya Deren, Meshes of the Afternoon
covers with the help of Surrealist Enrico
1943. 16mm film transferred to DVD,
black and white, silent, 14 minutes
Donati and entitling them Prire de toucher
Short film fragment featuring MD [Please Touch].
projected in a loop
1959: Exposition internationale du 119 Adrian Dax, Publication de 19461966: Etant donns
Surralisme documents graphiques de caractre Duchamp spent the last two decades
December 15, 1959-February 15, 1960 scientifiques, p.1intitule of his life, from 1946 to 1966, secretly
Amnagement, 1959. Manuscript
Galerie Daniel Cordier. 8, rue Miromesnil, building a elaborate erotic tableau vivant
lettre from Adrian Dax to Andr
Paris Breton regarding the preparations entitled, Etant donns: 1 la chute deau,
For the Eros theme of the Exposition for the 1959, 26.9 x 20.9 cm, BK 2 le gaz dclairage, which only became
internationale du Surralisme at the known to the public (and even to many
Galerie Daniel Cordier in Paris, Duchamp 120 Roger Van Hecke, Accrochage Galerie of the artists closest friends and family),
conceived of the pulsating breathing green Cordier, installation view of the according to Duchamps instructions, after
velvet-lined walls that served as the main exhibition, 1959. Gelatin silver his death when it entered a museum. The
print, 24 x 18.3 cm, BK
passageway into the darkened exhibition installation, now permanently displayed
space that was meant to be a kind of vaginal- 121 Denise Bellon, Installation view of
in the Philadelphia Museum of Art, is a
corporeal interior. Working with architect the exhibition, 1959 / 1980. Gelatin mixed-media diorama in a room closed off
Pierre Faucheux and several participating silver print, printed later, signed by a large wooden door and visible through
members of the Surrealist movement, by Bellon on the back 24 x 30 cm, DB two small eye-holes made in the door.
Duchamps ideas for the exhibition design Through them, one sees a hyper-realistic
emerged after long discussions about how 122 Pierre Faucheux, Plan of the scene including a life-size female nude
to transform the throbbing movement of Galerie Daniel Cordier, 1959. Ink sculpture lying with her legs spread and
and color crayons on carton, with
the Rotoreliefs into an architectural scale. holding a gas lamp in a landscape with a
notes on the back by Andr Breton
The air was perfumed, the floor was lined Premier projet de Pierre Faucheux shimmering waterfall behind. Arguably one
with sand, and speakers emitted the sound 35.2 x 66 cm, BK of the twentieth centurys most unusual and
of artist Radovan Ivsics recording of enigmatic artworks, Etant donns and the
womens heavy breathing throughout. With particular experience of it are inseparable
artist Mimi Parent, Duchamp designed the from the container in which it is installed
exhibition catalogues entitled Boite Alerte!, (the museum, that stately conservative
and for the deluxe copies reserved for the institution of masterpieces). As a viewer,
participating artists, he had male and bent and peering into the eye holes, one
female pot holders made. cannot help feeling like a voyeur peeping at a
nude that could be another manifestation of
the Large Glasss Bride, still unreachable
to the Bachelor (embodied by the viewer),
blocked by the door. In his final artwork,
Duchamp brought together many of his
persistent themes, including the nude, the
waterfall, gas, optical illusion, perspective,
photography, eroticism, and exhibition
display. A projection with a virtual
reproduction of the piece is on view in this
exhibition to give spectators some idea of the
last spectacle that Duchamp left behind.

123 MD (Virtual reproduction by Yukio


Fujimoto and Yukihiro Hirayoshi),
tant donns: 1. La chute deau / 2.
Le gaz dclairage (Given: 1. The
Waterfall / 2. The Illuminating Gas),
1946-66 / 2004. Video and stereo
pair photogram, Cortesa PMA.

Denise Bellon, Portrait of MD with chess board, at


his studio of 11 rue Larrey, 1938. Les Films de
lequinoxe. Fonds photographique Denise Bellon
Exhibition Lenders Marcel Duchamp Catalogue Fundacin PROA
_Bibliothque Kandinsky, Editorial Board Av. Pedro de Mendoza 1929
Paris Elena Filipovic [C1169AAD] Buenos Aires
_Centre Pompidou, Muse Cintia Mezza Argentina
National dArt Moderne, Adriana Rosenberg [54-11] 4104-1000
Centre de Creation Coordination www.proa.org
Industrielle, Paris Debbie Grimberg info@proa.org
_David Fleiss Collection, Texts -
Paris Gonzalo Aguilar, Thierry Opening Hours
_Indiana University Art de Duve, Marcel Duchamp, Open Tuesday Sundays
Museum, Bloomington Elena Filipovic, Rosalind and public holidays
_Austrian Frederick and Krauss, Octavio Paz, 11am 7 pm
Lilian Kiesler Private Hugo Petruschansky Last admission 30 minutes
Foundation, Vienna Regina Texeira de Barros before closing time.
_Les Films de Lquinox, Translations Mondays closed
Fonds Photographique Denise Jaime Arrambide, Marcelo -
Bellon, Paris Canossa, Elena Donato, Admission
_Jacqueline Matisse Monnier, Max Gurian, Guillermina General: $ 10
Villiers Sous Grez Rosenkratz Students: $ 6
_Moderna Museet, Stockholm Corrections Senior Citizen: $ 3
_Muse dArt Moderne de la Jaime Arrambide
Ville de Paris, Paris Magdalena Rodrguez
_Passage de Retz, Paris Documental and
_Philadelphia Museum of Art, Photographic Research
Philadelphia Cintia Mezza
_Jean-Frdric Schall Graphic Design
Collection, Paris Mario Gemin / Mariano Morales
_Succession Marcel Duchamp, Graphic Production
Villiers Sous Grez Mario Gemin,
_Zabriskie Gallery, New York Guillermo Goldschmidt
_Luisella Zignone Pre-press
Collection, Proietto & Lamarque
Strona Biellese Printer
Mundial S.A.
ISBN 978-987-21336-7-2

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