"Puppeteer of your own past” Marcel Duchamp and the manipulation of posterity
dc.contributor.advisor
Cowling, Elizabeth
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dc.contributor.advisor
Hammer, Martin
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dc.contributor.author
Lee, Michelle Anne
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dc.date.accessioned
2011-11-14T14:46:42Z
dc.date.available
2011-11-14T14:46:42Z
dc.date.issued
2010-06-29
dc.description.abstract
The image of Marcel Duchamp as a brilliant but laconic dilettante has come to dominate the
literature surrounding the artist’s life and work. His intellect and strategic brilliance were vaunted by his
friends and contemporaries, and served as the basis of the mythology that has been coalescing around the
artist and his work since before his death in 1968. Though few would challenge these attributions of
intelligence, few have likewise considered the role that Duchamp’s prodigious mind played in bringing
about the present state of his career. Many of the signal features of Duchamp’s artistic career: his avoidance
of the commercial art market, his cultivation of patrons, his “retirement” from art and the secret creation and
posthumous unveiling of his Étant Donnés: 1° la chute d’eau/2° le gaz d’éclairage, all played key roles in
the development of the Duchampian mythos.
Rather than treating Duchamp’s current art historical position as the fortuitous result of chance, this
thesis attempts to examine the many and subtle ways in which Duchamp worked throughout his life to
control how he and his work were and are perceived. Such an examination necessarily begins at the start of
his relationship with the general and specialist media, through the auspices of his painting Nude Descending
a Staircase, No. 2. This is followed by an examination of Duchamp’s decades-long relationship with the
press through the interviews given during his life.
Duchamp’s concern for his physical legacy is explored next, initially through his relationships with
his two dominant patrons, Walter and Louise Arensberg and Katherine Dreier. Not only did he act as
advisor and dealer in the development of both prestigious collections, Duchamp had the privileged position
of participant in the negotiations surrounding the disposition of the collections he had helped to build.
Duchamp’s concern for the preservation of his physical legacy continued after the installation of his own
work within major American museums. Thus, next is considered the development and effects of the two
large-scale retrospectives of Duchamp’s work held within his lifetime. Finally is considered the role of
Duchamp’s posthumous work, the Étant Donnés. Through the combination of secrecy and strategically
revealed hints, Duchamp ensured that his final work would engender discussion long after his death.
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/5631
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.subject
Duchamp, Marcel
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dc.subject
careerism
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dc.subject
career
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dc.subject
manipulation
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dc.subject
posterity
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dc.subject
Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2.
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dc.subject
Étant Donnés
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dc.subject
Arensberg
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dc.subject
Dreier
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dc.subject
Kimball
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dc.subject
Philadelphia
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dc.subject
Yale
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dc.subject
Tate
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dc.subject
Arts Council of Great Britain
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dc.title
"Puppeteer of your own past” Marcel Duchamp and the manipulation of posterity
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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