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Here’s Looking at Marcel Duchamp’s 1913 Bicycle Wheel

article by Ted Snell

In 1913, the debonair young artist Marcel Duchamp was riding a wave of outrage and incomprehension following the inclusion of his painting Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2, in the Armory Show in New York. The exhibition opened on March 15, and his work was the talk of the town, parodied by all, including Julian Street, the art critic with The New York Times, who described it as “an explosion in a shingle factory.”

Duchamp was 25 years old. In the previous decade, he had arrived in Paris and was introduced by his brothers Jacque Villon and Raymond Duchamp-Villon to the most experimental artists of the time. He eagerly experimented with Impressionism, Fauvism, and Cubism but it wasn’t until the furore created by his work in the Armory Show that he was thrust centre stage into debates about the future of art.

Those critical and personal attacks energized Duchamp, who gave up painting and began to explore what art might become in the era post “retinal art” – ie those artworks designed to appeal to the eye. He also turned his attention to the role of the artist in the new world of rampant capitalism on the brink of global war.

In his Paris studio, Duchamp began to create work with a conceptual base and an intellectual complexity that challenged previous notions about both art and art making. And of course, as a young provocateur, he also wanted to get back at those that had criticized him, so he couldn’t resist being a bit cheeky.

His first readymade (or assisted readymade because he put two existing objects together) was his Bicycle Wheel, a mass-produced stool with a bicycle wheel attached to its fork so the wheel could spin effortlessly. “In 1913, I had the happy idea to fasten a bicycle wheel to a kitchen stool and watch it turn” he explained in his lecture Apropos of Readymades at MoMA on October 19, 1961.

The work is, in one sense, the natural heir to the Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2, because it didn’t try to replicate movement, it moved. While his brother Raymond and others like Umberto Boccioni were making bronze sculptures that emulated movement, Duchamp made the perfect kinetic Futurist sculpture. Its futile gyrations most likely also harboured a schoolboy allusion to masturbation, a joke given greater prominence in his major work The Large Glass created from 1915-1923.

Although not publicly exhibited until 1951, Duchamp made a second version of bicycle wheel on his first visit to America and coined the term “readymade” to describe it. Andre Breton and Paul Eluard defined this category of artwork in their Dictionnaire abrégé du Surréalisme, or the Abridged Dictionary of Surrealism 1938, as “an ordinary object elevated to the dignity of a work of art by the mere choice of an artist”.

This second version of 1916 was also lost, but in 1951 Duchamp authorized an exhibition copy for Sidney Janis and inscribed in green on the wheel: “Marcel Duchamp 1913 / 1959(sic)”. This is the work purchased by the Museum of Modern Art, currently on show at the NGV.

 

 

 

Ted Snell  is a professor and chief cultural officer at the University of Western Australia

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