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Spellbound by Marcel: Duchamp, Love, and Art

Spellbound by Marcel: Duchamp, Love, and Art

by Ruth Brandon

Pegasus Books ·2022 ·352 pages
Maybe Someday
Maybe Someday
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28/99
Maybe Someday

43/99

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Bottom of the Pile

12/99

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About This Book

In 1913 Marcel Duchamp's Nude Descending a Staircase exploded through the American art world. This is the story of how he followed the painting to New York two years later, enchanted the Arensberg salon, and—almost incidentally—changed art forever. In 1915, a group of French artists fled war-torn Europe for New York. In the few months between their arrival—and America's entry into the war in April 1917—they pushed back the boundaries of the possible, in both life and art. The vortex of this transformation was the apartment at 33 West 67th Street, owned by Walter and Louise Arensberg, where artists and poets met nightly to talk, eat, drink, discuss each others' work, play chess, plan balls, organise magazines and exhibitions, and fall in and out of love. At the center of all this activity stood the mysterious figure of Marcel Duchamp, always approachable, always unreadable. His exhibit of a urinal, which he called Fountain , briefly shocked the New York art world before falling, like its perpetrator, into obscurity. Many people (of both sexes) were in love with Duchamp. Henri-Pierre Roché and Beatrice Wood were among them; they were also, briefly, and (for her) life-changingly, in love with each other. Both kept daily diaries, which give an intimate picture of the events of those years. Or rather two pictures—for the views they offer, including of their own love affair, are stunningly divergent. Spellbound by Marcel follows Duchamp, Roché, and Beatrice as they traverse the twentieth century. Roché became the author of Jules and Jim , made into a classic film by François Truffaut. Beatrice became a celebrated ceramicist. Duchamp fell into chess-playing obscurity until, decades later, he became famous for a second time—as Fountain was elected the twentieth century's most influential artwork.


Reviews

"A group biography of sorts, which charts, in sometimes gratuitous detail, the triangulated love affair between Duchamp, Wood and Roché, and the others who crossed their paths and their beds ..."

Lauren Elkin· The New York Times Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Part drama, part page-turning history, this paints the complexities of art and love in a seductive light."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Near the Top

"With clarifying details, Brandon places Duchamp's art in the context of his affairs and marriages; exhaustively chronicles Roché's obsession with conducting simultaneous love affairs, and tracks Wood's nightmare marriage to a heartless con man and ultimate triumph as a renowned ceramicist."

Donna Seaman· Booklist Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Drawing on revealing letters, diaries, and memoirs, Brandon's buoyant, meticulous story begins in 1913 with New York's Armory Show of new European art ..."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Brandon has woven a narrative that intermingles complex romantic entanglements with persistent artistic aspirations, giving readers a book that is one part 20th century cultural history, two parts gossipy soap opera ..."

Arthur Hoyle· The New York Journal of Books Read review ↗ Near the Top

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