DUCHAMP
Whilst at college in Leicester studying Fine Art under the tutelage and guidance of composer Gavin Bryars and historian Fred Orton we formed a study group who looked specifically at the work of Marcel Duchamp and it was a challenge and a joy to do so. This has meant that Duchamp has cropped up again recently in various ways as I wanderer around the internet and as he is looked at re-investigated and re-evaulated to a degree and I keep coming across pictures and information that have resonance for meWhat follows is no exception and he still fascinates . . . . when is a door not a door?
The threshold separating everyday objects from art objects is an inframince
'Inframince' is a term coined by Marcel Duchamp and which can not be defined. One can only give examples to describe it. It is a central concept in Duchamp’s aesthetic and it refers to the imperceptible difference between two seemingly identical items.
Quote by Horacio Zabala*:
“Of course Duchamp was conscious about the fact that, when taken out of the environment that sets their identity as works of art, the ready-mades could be easily confounded with the functional objects, that they were initially. We know that this happened at least three times”
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'Fountain' signed R. Mutt 1917 by Marcel Duchamp 'Readymade' |
“As soon as we start putting our thoughts into words and sentences everything gets distorted, language is just no damn good—I use it because I have to, but I don’t put any trust in it. We never understand each other.”
― Marcel Duchamp
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