Search Books
Jean Fouquet and the Invent… A Treatise on Painting (Gre…

Drawing on Art: Duchamp and Company

Author Dalia Judovitz
Publisher Univ Of Minnesota Press
Category Art
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
⌛ 🇫🇷 France pricing being fetched… Prices will appear once fetched — usually within a few minutes.
Share:
Book Details
ISBN / ASIN0816665303
ISBN-139780816665303
CategoryArt
MarketplaceFrance 🇫🇷

Description

Marcel Duchamp s 1919 readymade, L.H.O.O.Q., which he created by drawing a moustache and goatee on a commercial reproduction of the Mona Lisa, precipitated a radical reevaluation of the meaning of art, the process of art making, and the role of the artist. In Drawing on Art, Dalia Judovitz explores the central importance of appropriation, collaboration, influence, and play in Duchamp s work and in Dada and Surrealist art more broadly to show how the concept of art itself became the critical fuel and springboard for questioning art s fundamental premises. Judovitz argues that rather than simply negating art, Duchamp s readymades and later works, including films and conceptual pieces, demonstrate the impossibility of defining art in the first place. Through his readymades, for instance, Duchamp explicitly critiqued the commodification of art and inaugurated a profound shift from valuing art for its visual appearance to understanding the significance of its mode of public presentation. And if Duchamp literally drew on art, he also did so figuratively, thus raising questions of creativity and artistic influence. Equally destabilizing, Judovitz writes, was Duchamp s idea that viewers actively participate in the creation of the art they are viewing. In addition to close readings ranging across Duchamp s oeuvre, even his neglected works on chess, Judovitz provides interpretations of works by other figures who affected Duchamp s thinking and collaborated with him, notably Francis Picabia, Man Ray, and Salvador Dal , as well as artists who later appropriated and redeployed these gestures, such as Enrico Baj, Gordon Matta-Clark, and Richard Wilson. As Judovitz makes clear, these associations become paradigmatic of a new, collective way of thinking about artistic production that decisively overturns the myth of artistic genius.
Art History: The Key Concepts (Routledge Key Guides)
View
Out of Time: Desire in Atemporal Cinema
View
Japanese Studio Crafts: Tradition and the Avant-Garde
View
Mona Lisa: Inside the Painting
View
Beci Orpin Journal: Lost Girl
View
A Bushel of Pearls: Painting for Sale in Eighteenth-Ce…
View
Elvira Hufschmid - mobile distance (German Edition)
View
Writers who committed suicide: Ernest Hemingway, Virgi…
View
Color Harmonies
View