Duchampian News & Views
-
With A Lunatic Gesture We Forsook Jujistsu (Automatism A)
July 15, 2011 With a lunatic gesture we forsook jujitsu. Etwas unterscheiden zwischen werden Erde gesehen. The politics of underwriting that I have reclaimed, forsooth my shakespearean liege, a league embedded in the first strategy when I set out for champions, however it may have otherwise seemed. When the natives that combined their energies first of all eschewed gentrification, exclaimed that howeverso things might have first seemed to them symbolically, they would absolutely and hirsut.. read more... -
Secrets of 20th Century Music
July 15, 2011"One of the things that people don’t realize about Dad’s kind of music is, when you replace a C-sharp with a gunshot, it has to be a C-sharp gunshot or it sounds awful."
Spike Jonze Jr., as quoted by Thomas Pynchon
read more... -
And The Nominees for Le Prix Marcel Duchamp 2011 Are…
July 15, 2011 Each year, one French artist is awarded the prestigious Prix Marcel Duchamp. It does not garner quite the media buzz as the Turner Prize does, but the nominees do get a chance to exhibit in the Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art of Lille for two months, and the winner will have his or her own exhibition at the Centre Georges Pompidou as well as €35,000 in the bank. This year’s nominees include four impressive artists from very different backgrounds. Damien Caba.. read more... -
Stephen Colbert Suggests Gitmo Might Be Conceptual Art
July 15, 2011 July 14th, 2011: Stephen Colbert proves yet again the edginess of his political satire, making his audience audibly uncomfortable with this strangely avant-garde speculation: "It now occurs to me, could all of Gitmo, in fact be one giant art installation? Take our enemies from the stone-age villages in Afghanistan, fly them half way across the world and drop them into an extra-governmental, intra-liminal space, neither America nor the battlefield, here-in using .. read more... -
How To Take A Duchamp Road Trip
July 15, 2011 Step 1: Drive to the Philadelphia Art Museum, see the Large Glass and peek like a pervert through the wooden wall at "Entant Donnes." Chuckle at puns like "Fresh Widow." Step 2: Drive around the rest of the country, looking at waterfalls, landscapes, women, bachelors, machines, and windows. Let the memory of the incredible vividness of Duchamp's world subsume all later perceptions, which appear as pale shadows by comparison. Pull up to the Hudson and brea.. read more... -
Arthur C. Danto: on Hegel and Duchamp
July 14, 2011 Arthur C. Danto's conceptions of "the end of art" and "posthistoricism" were quickly adopted as catch-phrases and widely misunderstood by the art world of the eighties and nineties. He did not mean, however, that art could no longer be made, accomplished, nor that any criteria for its judgment was to be doomed--deemed historical. Here, Danto illuminates his complex philosophy--of which art was always and ever the object: "...and it is the.. read more... -
How a Situationist “Draws”
July 14, 2011 British architecture student Ji Soo Han recently made a "Situationist Drawing Device (shown below)" What exactly does this mean? Situationism, the brainchild of expressionist painter Asger Jorn and filmmaker Guy Debord (both accomplished theorists and provocateurs), was in many ways the last stage of an avant-garde progression that began with Dada. Feeling that Surrealist work had been coopted by the bourgeoisie and turned into a commodified style (while Dada w.. read more... -
Duchamp’s Funeral
July 13, 2011Duchamp’s Funeral:
posted by darksilenceinsuburbia.
liked by structuredstructure.
really liked by hyperbolicdude
reblogged by yourlaughlinesareshowing.
reliked by themasquerademind
reposted by newjerseykeepmybones
brought to you by the contemporary art blog.
rebrought to you by marcelduchamp.net
readymade for you by marcel duchamp.
read more... -
Few Have Explored This Bewildering Territory
July 12, 2011 "The privileged realm located in the boundary-zone between the three fields of power, religion and semiotics...Few people have explored this bewildering territory (by definition a no-man’s land of imagination) with the same energy as René Magritte, the bourgeois surrealist dressed in business suit and bowler hat, the revolutionary explorer who wove together into one strand the activities of showing and saying, geometry and linguistics, painter and poet. In th.. read more...


