Marcel Duchamp Redux
date:Thursday, July 24, 2008 time:12:00 PM to 6:00 PM venue:Norton Simon Museum address:411 West Colorado Boulevard Pasadena, CA 91105 View map from:Norton Simon Museum
This year marks the 45th anniversary of Marcel Duchamp’s
legendary retrospective at the Pasadena Art Museum, now the Norton Simon Museum.
Organized by Director Walter Hopps in 1963, By or of Marcel Duchamp or Rrose
Sélavy—the first-ever retrospective of the artist’s oeuvre—featured 114 works of
art, including major loans from Europe and the Philadelphia Museum of Art’s
Arensberg collection. Organizing an exhibition around this groundbreaking artist
was a major coup for a small West Coast institution. The Museum’s challenge to
East Coast authority was widely touted, and Hopps went on to organize a series
of innovative exhibitions there.
The installation Marcel Duchamp Redux features a dozen Duchamp works acquired by
the Museum during and after the 1963 exhibition, as well as photographs and
ephemera from the retrospective. Ready-mades (everyday or found objects that
become art, thanks to the artist’s idea and designation thereof) perfectly
illustrate Duchamp’s irreverent wit and subversive relationship to art history.
Two of them, The Bottle Rack, 1963 (original 1914), and L.H.O.O.Q. or La Jaconde,
1964 (original 1919), included in the installation, exemplify the idea that what
constitutes art is defined by the artist. The Bottle Rack is a utilitarian
object and L.H.O.O.Q. is a poster of Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa on which the
artist has drawn with pencil and gouache.
Duchamp had a long-standing interest in optical illusion and movement,
particularly as applied to painting. One of the results of this preoccupation is
a set of “rotoreliefs” from 1953: motor-driven constructions with rotating color
disks that give the impression of three-dimensional form in movement. This will
be the first time since the 1963 retrospective that they are on view. Boite-en-Valise,
1941–42 (original 1938), represents an entirely new and different attitude by an
artist about his artwork. This portable assemblage contains examples of
Duchamp’s works, reproduced in miniature, and packed in a customized case that
presents the artist’s idea for a traveling mini-museum.
Duchamp’s retrospective occurred at a moment when the Southern California art
community was exploding with new talent and boasted a number of galleries to
host it. Interest in the art of such an experimental and nonconforming artist
was high. The opening reception was attended by Duchamp himself and such
well-known artists as Edward Ruscha, Robert Irwin and Andy Warhol. A selection
of photographs from the opening and other events during Duchamp’s Pasadena visit
are included in the installation
Time : Friday 12.00 - 9.00 pm , Monday , Wednesday, Thursday
,Saturday , Sunday 12.00 - 6.00 pm
