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The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even

Duchamp, Marcel
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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.3/63295
Date
1958
Description
Oil, varnish, lead foil, lead wire, and dust on glass plate mounted between two glass panels "Surely one of the most enigmatic works of art in any museum, The Large Glass dominates a gallery devoted to Marcel Duchamp's work from the exact location in which he placed it in 1954. Painstakingly executed on two planes of glass with unconventional materials such as lead foil, fuse wire, and dust, the appearance of the Glass is the result of an extraordinary combination of chance procedures, carefully plotted perspective studies, and laborious craftsmanship. As for its metaphysical aspect, Duchamp's voluminous preparatory notes, published in 1934, reveal that his "hilarious picture" is intended to diagram the erratic progress of an encounter between the "Bride," in the upper panel, and her nine "Bachelors" gathered timidly below amidst a wealth of mysterious mechanical apparatus. Exhibited only once (in 1926 at the Brooklyn Museum) before it was accidentally broken and laboriously repaired by the artist, the Glass joined the Museum's collection in 1953 and has gradually become the subject of a vast scholarly literature and the object of pilgrimages for countless visitors drawn to its witty, intelligent, and vastly liberating redefinition of what a work of art can be." from PMA website accessed 7/8/2004 http://www.philamuseum.org/collections/modern_contemporary/1952-98-1.shtml
 
full view, hand colored by Duchamp, inscribed "Marcellus Coloriavit" (included in "Eau & Gaz à tous les étages," deluxe edition of Robert Lebel's book on Duchamp
 
Type of Work
Photograph
Subject
Machinery, Brides, Marriage, Conceptual art, Courtship, Sculpture, Abstract, Dadaism, Consumption (Economics), Love, Defloration, Sex symbolism, Art and technology, Puns and punning, Wit and humor, Sculpture, French --20th century
Rights Statement
All rights reserved
Item is Part of
141016
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