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Marcel Duchamp at MoMA: Five Revelations From the Artist’s First North American Survey in Over 50 Years

The museum’s major survey presents Duchamp not only as the father of conceptual art but also as a techno-imaginative innovator and semiotic pioneer who anticipated how we read images, language and reality today.

By Elisa Carollo

A wide gallery view at the Museum of Modern Art shows a large black-and-white mural of Marcel Duchamp repeated in profile, with a single painting framed in a doorway beyond.
Installation view: “Marcel Duchamp” at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. The Museum of Modern Art, New York

One of the most interesting aspects of major retrospective surveys—particularly when staged after decades—is the way they attempt to present, and often reframe, the artist by situating their work both within the present moment and across the broader evolution of art history. Because artists so often anticipate and amplify the undercurrents of their time, such exhibitions can eventually reveal alternative readings through which to approach a practice, bringing into focus aspects that may once have gone unnoticed.

This is certainly the case for Marcel Duchamp, innovator and provocateur par excellence, who pushed the disruptive spirit of Dada toward conceptual and philosophical thresholds that not only anticipated but, in many ways, laid the groundwork for much of what we now describe as contemporary art. A new exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York—the first survey in North America in over 50 years—offers a wealth of new interpretive lenses through which to read the unique and innovative contribution Duchamp made to the course of art history.

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