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Page 1: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

Marcel Duchamp• Cubism

• Dada

• Readymade

• Iconoclast

Page 2: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism,

1912

Page 3: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

• Influenced by Picasso’s Cubism

• With Picasso the subject is seen from different points of view.

• Here the subject is depicted in motion.

Page 4: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

• He was influenced by the photographs of Muybridge.

• Muybridge was interested in using photography to show the figure in motion.

Page 5: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

Muybridge

Page 6: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.
Page 7: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

• Here is a strobe light photo of Duchamp descending a staircase.

• It was made years after the painting to illustrate his intention.

Page 8: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

• The painting was rejected by Cubists because it used cubism for a different purpose.

• Duchamp then rejected cubism.

• He would soon reject all established styles.

Page 9: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

• This work was shown at the famous Armory show of 1913 in New York.

• The show showcased modern art to America.

• The press had a field-day criticizing the work.

• They called it an “explosion in a shingle factory.”

Page 10: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

Dada

• Dada is a movement, not a style.

• It began as a reaction to middle-class values, and the insanity of WWI.

• It began as a literary movement, but soon included the other arts.

• It is meant to shock, and resulted in works that are irrational, confrontational, and even absurd.

Page 11: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

Dada

• Dada is based on chance, and not reason or emotion like the art styles that came before it.

• Dada is anti-art, anti-beauty, anti-form, and anti-traditional.

• Duchamp became the unofficial leader of Dada in the visual arts.

• His work provokes the viewer to ask the question: “what is art?”.

Page 12: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

Dada

• In Duchamp’s work the idea is more important than the product, or even the process.

Page 13: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

Bicycle Wheel, Dada, 1913

Page 14: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

Readymade• An industrial,

mass produced object that is exhibited as art.

• It is not a new object but on for which a new idea has been created.

Page 15: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

• According to Duchamp’s theory an artist needed to do two things to an object in order to make art.

1. Change its context.

2. Displace its function.

Page 16: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

• Duchamp said he created it for his own amusement.

• It is art that moves.• It is also

interactive.• It is similar to objects

used to demonstrate laws of physics:

1. angular momentum

2. Centrifugal force

Page 17: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

• Duchamp studied physics as a hobby while working in a library.

Page 18: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

Bottle Rack, 1914

Page 19: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

Bottle Rack, 1914

• This was an ordinary rack (mass produced) for drying bottles.

• It became art when he chose it.

• He put it in his studio then in a gallery (changed its context).

• He didn’t use it to dry bottles (displaced its function).

Page 20: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

Bottle Rack, 1914

• This is a ready-made.• By choosing it,

imagining it as art, and showing it in an exhibition, it became art.

• He even chose it randomly (Dada).

Page 21: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

In advance of Broken Arm, 1915

• The title suggests something disabling and mysterious.

• Duchamp created a new idea for a banal object.

• The idea helps to make it art.

• There is no skill or technique involved.

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Fountain, 1917• The subject is really

Aesthetics.• Aesthetics is the

philosophy of art and beauty.

• Duchamp wants the viewer to look at it and consider what art really is.

Page 23: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

• The title reverses the function of the object.

• He signed it, as artists often do to their work, for the purpose of authentication.

• In doing so he is mocking the traditions & practices of artists.

• This is what an iconoclast does.

Page 24: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

• He submitted the work to an unjuried show.

• Unjuried means all work submitted to a show are hung without judgement about quality or taste.

• The group hanging the show (Society for Independent Artists) considered it too shocking & distasteful to hang.

Page 25: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

Fountain – exhibited under the pseudonym R. Mutt

• Duchamp defended the piece in the magazine The Blind Man, (which he edited), with these words:

"Whether Mr. Mutt with his own hands made the fountain or not has no importance. He chose. He took an ordinary article of life, placed it so that its useful significance disappeared under a new title and point of view ...[creating] a new thought for that object."

Page 26: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.
Page 27: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

L.H.O.O.Q ,1919• Pronounced in

French the title of the work phonetically makes a joke out of Da Vinci’s masterpiece.

Page 28: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

• L.H.O.O.Q was a direct attack on Renaissance art, and the standards and conventions it represented.

• He put a moustache on the Mona Lisa.

• Like a vandal he attacks traditional views of art and beauty.

• This is exactly the kind of thing an iconoclast does.

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Young Man and

Girl in Spring

Duchamp

1911

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Three Standard Stoppages1913-14

• Duchamp dropped three threads, each a meter long, on to the same number of Prussian blue pieces of canvas.

• Then they were stuck to the surfaces without any adjustments to the curves that were determined by chance.

• He then cut up the cloth and stuck it to glass plates, finally encasing them in a wooden box.

• Three wooden "rulers," cut following the same curves, were then added.

(Ramirez 35)

Page 31: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

• The objects were meant to mock standards.• His work pokes fun at the standard meter, an

actual object, kept in the International Office of Measurements and Weights in Paris.

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Page 33: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

• Duchamp said that 3 Standard Stoppages opened the way "to escape from those traditional methods of expression long associated with art.”

• Duchamp called most art “retinal painting" -art designed for the luxuriance of the eye.

• Retinal painting required formal intelligence and a skillful hand on the part of the artist.

• The Stoppages depended on chance which, paradoxically, they "standardized."

Page 34: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

Network of Stoppages, 1914

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• The work is created with chance and random acts.

• The Fauvist painting Young Man and Girl in Spring, 1911 is cropped with black paint.

• The artist then uses the tracings of Three Standard Stoppages to create a network of lines.

• He numbers the lines.• In doing so he creates a new work by

incorporating two old ones.• This work was also used to plan a future

work.• It contains a scale plan for Large Glass.

Page 36: Marcel Duchamp Cubism Dada Readymade Iconoclast. Nude Descending Staircase, Cubism, 1912.

The Large Glass,1915-23

• The work is painted on glass.

• Because the work is transparent it incorporates the real world.

• It was broken during shipment.

• Duchamp was not upset; he considered this random chance event the finishing touch.