Duchamp interviews

  Рет қаралды 148,167

bamchum

bamchum

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 59
@daiana1377
@daiana1377 3 жыл бұрын
I really liked his quote "not everyone is an artist but everyone is a fucking critic" so here I am at 1 am
@doublevelvet
@doublevelvet 16 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this, even.
@tirompoicculo
@tirompoicculo 13 жыл бұрын
i love you marcel you changed my life.
@knoxrembrandt
@knoxrembrandt 12 жыл бұрын
eine faszinierende Persönlichkeit... und seine Haut und seine Hautstruktur...
@Neptunade
@Neptunade 15 жыл бұрын
I wish someone would subtitle the french part.
@christchrist93
@christchrist93 2 жыл бұрын
13 years later still nothing?!?!?!?
@lloplop
@lloplop 15 жыл бұрын
no no I was responding to someone! Duchamp is high on my list of most influential artists of all time!
@lloplop
@lloplop 16 жыл бұрын
me too. it changed everything.
@puskaradiolove
@puskaradiolove 15 жыл бұрын
GENIUS!!!
@codecxo
@codecxo 16 жыл бұрын
He would probably love to hear you say this!
@tlaniganschmidt
@tlaniganschmidt 13 жыл бұрын
@Girl102 Cezanne's art is more analytical of composition than paint subsumed into beauty.This thus begins the road to Duchamp.This type of analysis gives us modernism,which is a physical-fact of culture.But,walking around any contemporary American City,Gothic revival churches stand.These buildings utilize beauty to captivate the feelings through moods & stained glass.Co-existing with Duchamp these buildings have functional toilets & urinals.Duchamp is about utility-contemplated as part ofLife.
@braedon173
@braedon173 14 жыл бұрын
with every new generation of artists, the whole genre will be reinvented yet again - good old fashioned talent and craftsmanship will always win out it in the end......
@MrFalconford
@MrFalconford 12 жыл бұрын
happy birthday mr marcel duchamp a day late, industry certainly provides necessities for certain however what they do to their own is altogether another question that requires further research from my perspective
@srlouart
@srlouart 14 жыл бұрын
Marcel Duchamp is the most important artist of the xx century, no question about it.
@zanemechem5250
@zanemechem5250 10 жыл бұрын
Subtitles, Please...
@nobodady1
@nobodady1 13 жыл бұрын
@tlaniganschmidt Thanks. I love your comment and agree with your corrections except for one. If his art is open to so many interpretations, how can it be free of irony?
@jmclivingwithart581
@jmclivingwithart581 Ай бұрын
It is ironic to the highest degree. And now a urinal has become iconic. How ironic! That's also why his example of a "reciprocal readymade" was: use a Rembrandt as an irony board....
@TheJD1284
@TheJD1284 12 жыл бұрын
To me Duchamp is a work of art in his own terms because I am indifferent to him.
@nobodady1
@nobodady1 13 жыл бұрын
@tlaniganschmidt In my view, you have about half of it right. The other side of the coin of turning ordinary things into art, was to regard art as something rather ordinary in itself. There is this leveling effect between the artificial and the natural. The nexus point between those two worlds is the Human Being. Duchamp situates humanity on this precipice. Ironically, this overcomes the leveling effect --- we behold the extraordinary within the ordinary.
@cronicadelojo
@cronicadelojo 16 жыл бұрын
in fact you are right
@BloatedSensations
@BloatedSensations 14 жыл бұрын
@vassiliscompo No. It's because when the focus shifts to being on the craft, art stagnates and regurgitation eventually becomes the order of the day. Sure, we may get a period where we get some "prettier" art, but what in the hell is that worth? The deepest worth of art is art as a vehicle of exploration of the human condition. The time of artist as cabinetmaker is, or at least should be, over. Art has grown so far beyond that. There is no value in recession.
@jmclivingwithart581
@jmclivingwithart581 Ай бұрын
The phrase, "the minute I liked it, I would discard it," makes me think that this is how he treated women... like "ready maids." Indifference my eye. There's more to this readymade business than meets the retina...
@tlaniganschmidt
@tlaniganschmidt 13 жыл бұрын
@nobodady1 a better way for me to say,is that for me,there is nothing ironic in his Art.But in truth Duchamp is open to ironic interpretations.The problem i have is when saying his Art is ironic just becomes a way to get an"A" on the ArtWorld entranceExam.The enormously rich complexity of Duchamp is(still at this point) a much needed counterpoint to the in-rush of techno-culture.Contemplative situations & Objects abound,but he focuses on particular situational-contemplations appTechno
@MrFalconford
@MrFalconford 13 жыл бұрын
@tlaniganschmidt hes a commercial, or a magazine cover, a supermodel something like that or a bumper sticker
@outlier56
@outlier56 15 жыл бұрын
dope
@camiEntras
@camiEntras 15 жыл бұрын
confuso e inexplicable para entender en latinoamerica.
@nobodady1
@nobodady1 13 жыл бұрын
@fissionchips223 Je suis d'accord!
@questacris
@questacris 15 жыл бұрын
genius
@lusewicz
@lusewicz 14 жыл бұрын
ES NECESARIO UNA TRADUCCION AL CASTELLANO.
@Euroflounder
@Euroflounder 15 жыл бұрын
That's such an ironic statement.
@penutbutterjelly1
@penutbutterjelly1 13 жыл бұрын
Why is he so cool?
@nobodady1
@nobodady1 13 жыл бұрын
@Girl102Pixie Perhaps Duchamp and his followers were basically critics -- of art and of civilization. But their critiques were themselves acts of creation -- hence art of a type. Critiques Concrete?
@rosemonfort
@rosemonfort 10 жыл бұрын
Loplop : Max Ernst ? Marcel Duchamp est Le Grand Marchand du Sel du XXe siècle. Sans doute l'artiste le plus éminent de l'histoire de l'art, sa pénétration intellectuelle est sans commune mesure, c'est à se demander s'il n'a pas voyagé dans le futur pour y imposer sa vision de l'art. En tout cas avec "Etant Donnés", œuvre posthume, il a réussi à dépasser avec certitude, génie et Teeny, les frontières de la mort avec instantanéité. 9 mois après sa mort physique, il renaissait spirituellement par le biais d'une des œuvres les plus influentes du XXe siècle. Son emprise n'a pas fini d'exercer son pouvoir au XXIe siècle. En effet, au delà de l'Art, les 2 trous dans la porte, mettant le regardeur en position de voyeur, n'étaient rien d'autre que les prémices de ce qu'allait devenir l'Art ou les premiers fruits de grand n'importe quoi.
@sergionunesdemorais3302
@sergionunesdemorais3302 2 жыл бұрын
Plus ou Moins..............
@jmclivingwithart581
@jmclivingwithart581 Ай бұрын
@@sergionunesdemorais3302 D'abord plus, et puis après de moins en moins... Duchamp a exposé le système d'art et son fétishisme (commercialisé), mais il est resté dans le système de l'artiste, à fond. Malgré le mythe et tout il m'est sympathique.
@martinezvegamarcello8352
@martinezvegamarcello8352 12 жыл бұрын
genius gut!! or ever
@nobodady1
@nobodady1 13 жыл бұрын
@Girl102Pixie Why should one regard ordinary life as "base?" And why should one place art on a pedestal above life? I think what Duchamp questions is the notion that art improves ordinary life --- in that Bourgeoise way of dignifying our walls and public spaces with decor of all kinds. If we want to elevate the ordinary, we need not to escape it or decorate it, but to see life in a new way -- a way that is beyond our prejudices --- and our tastes. Well, this is my understanding.
@nobodady1
@nobodady1 13 жыл бұрын
@Girl102Pixie I believe Duchamp deserves to be criticized in an authentic way --- that is, by those who have some notion of what he was up to. Ideals and beauty and importance and art: for him these were always questions to ask, rather than answers to promote. He asked the question, is there a difference between aesthetics and taste? If they are the same thing, that presents one kind of problem. If they are separate things, a whole different problem. What is your problem?
@vassiliscompo
@vassiliscompo 14 жыл бұрын
@BloatedSensations Why is that?... Just for the artist to be a more respectful role in society than the craftsman?...
@sheba021
@sheba021 15 жыл бұрын
Yes, Duchamp is indeed one of the most influential artists of all time. He showed a school of other largely talentless "artists" how to make large sums of money with very little effort.
@LondonDada
@LondonDada 12 жыл бұрын
Dada was essentially about ethics and true morals, not totally nihilism. At heart Duchamp, as with Hugo Ball, father of Dada, was trying to enlighten. Try search London Dada..
@BloatedSensations
@BloatedSensations 14 жыл бұрын
@nikossyren88 "I THINK,ON SOME LEVEL,THAT IT'LL SHIFT BACK AGAIN TO IT'S ARTISAN ROOTS-OF CRAFT" Oh God, I hope not!
@jonlesliehaynes
@jonlesliehaynes 15 жыл бұрын
@lloplop really? you feel Duchamp had no talent? explain please.
@tlaniganschmidt
@tlaniganschmidt 13 жыл бұрын
all it is is Transubstatiation: aka theRomaan-Catholic belief that when the priest says "this is my Body" & this is my blood" bread & wine become(literally) Christ's body & blood through the "power" of the priest,to the believer,it looks just-like bread & wine but is now a body & blood. all Duchamp did was to secularize-Transubstantiation,turning the "ART-WORLD" into a Faith-based-community.He is a public-relations genius & that is much of the 20th century.
@artistinstinct
@artistinstinct 12 жыл бұрын
artist as pointer? >>>>(U)
@almanacofsleep
@almanacofsleep 14 жыл бұрын
@sheba021 "make large sums of money with very little effort." don't know what your talking about, most artists can't make a living out of their art.
@rlevanony1
@rlevanony1 13 жыл бұрын
@SiriusRKW I thought about these things maybe when I was 4. There is no genius.
@Fractaloop
@Fractaloop 14 жыл бұрын
On this days ART is Paint. If I make a piece of jewellery from a string of wire, that is not see as ART ! Why is that ?? Why people pay 1000£ for some paint and they do not give value for a piece of ART that come from the hands of a Craft man ? OH ! I know !! Crafts are not ART, Paint is ART... OR Do the Artists need to die to have some value in the ART he left ?? I think this all have to do with Elitism. DaDa-Project
@TheJD1284
@TheJD1284 12 жыл бұрын
Fnaf dyu dri n styifnna pr dyu tsi dri styifnna!
@kirliani
@kirliani 13 жыл бұрын
der erste Antikünstler und Kunstbetrüger the first anti-artist art fraud
@lloplop
@lloplop 15 жыл бұрын
no talent? it must be horrible to be so limited.
@EricWatbe
@EricWatbe 10 ай бұрын
Utter BS
Marcel Duchamp Talks with Martin Friedman about the Readymade
2:52
Walker Art Center
Рет қаралды 89 М.
Interview with Marcel Duchamp
2:55
EditionsAllia
Рет қаралды 8 М.
“Don’t stop the chances.”
00:44
ISSEI / いっせい
Рет қаралды 62 МЛН
СИНИЙ ИНЕЙ УЖЕ ВЫШЕЛ!❄️
01:01
DO$HIK
Рет қаралды 3,3 МЛН
Marcel Duchamp | HOW TO SEE “Readymades” with MoMA curator Ann Temkin
6:13
The Museum of Modern Art
Рет қаралды 223 М.
'Fountain' by Marcel Duchamp
4:53
nationalgalleries
Рет қаралды 108 М.
Dada and Cabaret Voltaire
5:02
ImagePlanet
Рет қаралды 551 М.
John Cage about silence
4:18
jdavidm
Рет қаралды 1,4 МЛН
State of the Art - Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat - 1986
4:02
Illuminations Media
Рет қаралды 1,3 МЛН
Marcel Duchamp - Anemic Cinema
5:07
auteurgirl
Рет қаралды 90 М.
interview with marcel duchamps 01
1:55
langmik
Рет қаралды 29 М.
Marcel Duchamp - Anemic Cinema
6:42
GBM Channel TV
Рет қаралды 991 М.
Frank Stella - 1972
10:42
5imone5
Рет қаралды 207 М.
“Don’t stop the chances.”
00:44
ISSEI / いっせい
Рет қаралды 62 МЛН