MoMA’s Marcel Duchamp show made me long for those simpler times when "eliminating the artist's hand" provided a pathway back ...
A hundred years ago, in 1925, Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968) had long returned from New York back to Paris. His Readymade phase was pretty much over, just as he had abandoned painting for more than half a ...
I’m watching a flickery, tantalisingly brief video-clip of Marcel Duchamp being interviewed in 1966 for BBC Two’s Late Night Line-Up, by Joan Bakewell. It has the feel of an unlikely encounter: on the ...
Marcel Duchamp’s original “Fountain” sculpture vanished within days of its 1917 appearance. He later introduced these versions in response to demand. In 1963, Duchamp gave permission for a critic in ...
Love isn’t a word, or a concept, that one usually associates with Marcel Duchamp, the modernist master of irony and distance, ...
Gleaming impishly in a far flung gallery, the urinal that broke the art world. In standard issue glossy white porcelain, it ...
Marcel Duchamp inside the exhibition The Art of Assemblage at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1961, with his artworks “Fountain” (1950, replica of lost 1917 original) and “Bicycle Wheel” (1951, ...
Collector and columnist Adam Lindemann writes about what Marcel Duchamp has to teach people involved in the art market.
Four finalists have been nominated for the 2025 Marcel Duchamp Prize: Xie Lei, Bianca Bondi, Eva Nielsen and Lionel Sabatté. The 25th edition of the Marcel Duchamp Prize will be held at the Musée ...
After nearly four decades, the king of the art dealers says goodbye to his perch at 980 Madison—and moves to the ground floor ...
Bits of Paper, Scraps of Cloth and Photographs of Photographs “Pipe, Glass, Bottle of Rum: The Art of Appropriation” is a worthy but frustrating exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art that features ...
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