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MARCEL, 64, is the most famous of the Duchamp brothers. After a dozen years as modern art’s No. 1 bad boy, in 1923 he gave up such experiments as his stroboscopic Nude Descending a Staircase in ...
Raymond Duchamp-Villon sculpted this terracotta head of the poet and critic Charles Baudelaire, at the Davis Museum at Wellesley College, in 1911. Baudelaire had been dead 44 years. Here, with his ...
11 x 11.38 in. (27.9 x 28.9 cm.) Ink on paper, with the artist's inkstamp lower left, with a sketch on the reverse. 11 x 11 3/8 in. (sheet), unframed. Provenance: The estate of the artist; Suzanne ...
These records consist of materials that document the planning and execution of exhibits, including "Collection in Context: Raymond Duchamp-Villon's 'The Horse,'" "Faces of Friendship: The Art World ...
As a cavalry doctor with the 11th Cuirassiers during World War I, Raymond Duchamp-Villon knew equine anatomy well. As a sculptor, and one of the triumvirate of brothers that included Painter ...
Raymond Duchamp-Villon and Jacques Villon were doing nothing uncommon — chess was as commonplace in that long-lost cultural age as heated discussions on modern art.
Cary Leibowitz. Mr. Duchamp Miss Selavy, 2017. Dymo tape on found photo, 7 x 9 inches. Photo courtesy of Francis Naumann Fine Art, New York. Duchamp’s ideas are “as prescient today as they ...
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