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The subversive French artist is receiving his first retrospective in the United States in more than 50 years. Decades after ...
Oh, and by the way, two other of Cattelan’s duck-tape bananas also sold – one for $120,000, the other for $150,000. Well, compared to the $6.2 million paid for “Comedian,” at least those two prices ...
The Museum of Modern Art announces Marcel Duchamp, the first North American retrospective of the artist’s work in over 50 years in the Steven and Alexandra Cohen Center for Special Exhibitions.
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ARTnews on MSNFirst US Marcel Duchamp Retrospective in Half a Century to Debut in New York in 2026The US will get its first Marcel Duchamp retrospective in more than half a century next year, in what is already poised to be one of 2026's most high-profile museum exhibitions. With a checklist ...
With what name did Marcel Duchamp sign the urinal he exhibited as “Fountain” in 1917? Which British playwright, who died in 1973, was buried in the garden of his home in Jamaica?
Marcel Duchamp’s 1917 sculpture of a urinal, titled Fountain, can be seen in art museums in Philadelphia, San Francisco and London, but would not look out of place in the restrooms there.
A urinal designed to avoid urine splashback on the user and the floor will improve sanitation, bathroom cleanliness, and user experience. Urinal designs have not materially changed in over a century.
By 1917, the public restroom staple was culturally ubiquitous enough to inspire Marcel Duchamp’s “ La Fontaine.” Since then, basic urinal design has remained similar, if not nearly identical ...
The style of urinal that was elevated to the status of artistic landmark by Marcel Duchamp in his 1917 dada art piece “La Fontaine” would not look out of place in today’s public restrooms.
A white gentlemen's urinal has been named the most influential modern art work of all time. Marcel Duchamp's Fountain came top of a poll of 500 art experts in the run-up to this year's Turner Prize ...
In old age, he founded the Marcel Duchamp Chess Endowment Fund in support of American chess, and in 1967—a year before his death—participated in a tournament in Monte Carlo.
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