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Cover image for Marcel Duchamp and Max Ernst : the bride shared
Marcel Duchamp and Max Ernst : the bride shared
Title:
Marcel Duchamp and Max Ernst : the bride shared
JLCTITLE245:
David Hopkins.
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Oxford : Clarendon Press ; Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1998.
Physical Description:
xv, 211 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 29 cm.
ISBN:
9780198175131

9780198762027
Abstract:
David Hopkins analyses a fascinating network of shared themes and images in the work of Marcel Duchamp and Max Ernst, two of the central names of modern art. Covering a period of time from 1912 to the mid-1940s, the author shows how their preoccupations intersected with those of Dada and Surrealism, the movements to which they were linked.

In a multi-layered argument, rich in original discoveries and insights, the author shows how the artists subverted Catholic doctrine using powerfully bizarre and disturbing visual imagery appropriated from areas as diverse as Symbolist painting and Freudian psychoanalysis. He charts new territory by showing that their parodic flirtation with the imagery of Rosicrucianism and Freemasonry amounted to what he calls a 'poetics of separatist male identity' which ironically reinforced dominant modes of male avant garde organization.
Reading Level:
1720 L Lexile
Bibliography Note:
Includes bibliographical references (p. [191]-199) and index.
Contents:
1. 'Constructing' and 'Unveiling' the Bride: Duchamp's Mariee and the Ideology of Gender -- 2. The Tripartite Bride: Belief Systems as Structure -- 3. The Robing of the Bride: Max Ernst's Response to Duchamp -- 4. Identity, Taxonomy, Narrative: Geometry in Ernst's Vox Angelica and Related Works -- 5. Conclusion: Rrose Selavy and Loplop.
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