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 Duchamp,
Marcel (1887-1968), French Dada artist, whose small but controversial output
exerted a strong influence on the development of 20th-century avant-garde
art. Born on July 28, 1887, in Blainville, brother of the artist Raymond
Duchamp-Villon and half brother of the painter Jacques Villon, Duchamp began
to paint in 1908. After producing several canvases in the current mode of
Fauvism, he turned toward experimentation and the avant-garde, producing his
most famous work, Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2 (Philadelphia Museum of
Art) in 1912; portraying continuous movement through a chain of overlapping
cubistic figures, the painting caused a furor at New York City's famous
Armory Show in 1913. He painted very little after 1915, although he
continued until 1923 to work on his masterpiece, The Bride Stripped Bare by
Her Bachelors, Even (1923, Philadelphia Museum of Art), an abstract work,
also known as The Large Glass, composed in oil and wire on glass, that was
enthusiastically received by the surrealists. In sculpture, Duchamp
pioneered two of the main innovations of the 20th century—kinetic art and
ready-made art. His “ready-mades” consisted simply of everyday objects, such
as a urinal and a bottle rack. His Bicycle Wheel (1913, original lost; 3rd
version, 1951, Museum of Modern Art, New York City), an early example of
kinetic art, was mounted on a kitchen stool. After his short creative
period, Duchamp was content to let others develop the themes he had
originated; his pervasive influence was crucial to the development of
surrealism, Dada, and pop art. Duchamp became an American citizen in 1955.
He died in Paris on October 1, 1968.
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