A catalog documenting an exhibition of Marcel Duchamp's editioned
readymades at Gagosian Gallery, New York, replicating his American debut
at Cordier & Ekstrom in the same building in 1965 and including new
essays. Marcel Duchamp's first readymade, a standard bicycle wheel
attached to a wooden stool, came about "as a pleasure, something to have
in my room the way you have a fire, or a pencil sharpener, except that
there was no usefulness." Over the ensuing decades many of his
readymades were lost or destroyed, but in 1964 Duchamp, working with
acclaimed gallerist Arturo Schwarz, supplanted the original readymades
with fourteen precisely executed editioned multiples, a process which
culminated in an exhibition in New York in 1965.
Adina Kamien-Kazhdan chronicles this process in a new essay that
provides significant insight into Duchamp and Schwarz's relationship, as
well as detailing the creation of the editions. Calvin Tomkins' new
profile of Duchamp prefaces this beautiful book and is a welcome
addition, serving as the perfect introduction to the black-and-white
installation shots from the 1965 show and the full-page color
photographs of each readymade.