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Marcel Duchamp: A Game of Chess [VHS]
 
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Marcel Duchamp: A Game of Chess [VHS]

 NR |  VHS Tape


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Marcel Duchamp remains a major influence in contemporary art, and Marcel Duchamp: A Game of Chess shows why. This French program includes original footage of interviews filmed during Duchamp's first retrospective exhibition, held at the Pasadena Art Museum in 1963, five years before he died. The program has voice-overs in English, with black-and-white footage supplemented by color shots of the art works. The first half focuses mainly on Duchamp's early oil paintings and his ease at adapting the very latest innovations in painting from Matisse and Cézanne to cubism and futurism. We watch Duchamp speak about his famous painting shown at the Armory in 1913, Nude Descending the Staircase, while standing in front of it. We gain insights into his Dada period, which continues to influence conceptual art today. Duchamp explains that that work was the result of a humanitarian protest against the war, against a society that was becoming "absurd and unacceptable." We hear a number of his ideas, such as "repetition is a form of death." Duchamp explains in detail the various levels of meaning of his 1923 work entitled "Why Not a Sneeze," which was a cage full of what resembled sugar lumps but which were actually made of marble. Original music by the French composer Edgar Varèse, Duchamp's contemporary, adds to the sense of the revolutionary nature of Duchamp's art production and ideas. Including visual metaphors and interviews with numerous French luminaries, this program addresses an array of audiences, from art and history buffs to those interested in new ideas in the 20th century. --Anne Barclay Morgan

Product Description

A driving force behind many modern movements--Dada, Surrealism, Futurism, and Kinetic/Conceptual Art--Marcel Duchamp did more than any other artist in this century to change the concept of art. The enigmatic French artist and theorist candidly discusses his life, his ideas on art, his obsession with chess, and why he chose to live in America after fleeing France in 1915.

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