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Stevens, Duchamp and the American ‘ism’, 1915–1919

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Abstract

After leaving Paris for New York during the First World War Marcel Duchamp declared, perhaps conveniently, that the true home of art had also recently moved across the Atlantic. ‘If only America would realize that the art of Europe is finished — dead’, he told a reporter for the New York Tribune in September 1915, just a few months after arriving in the States, ‘and that America is the country of the art of the future’ (qtd in Naumann 36). Duchamp was already a minor celebrity in the United States (hence the Tribune interview) thanks to his Nude Descending a Staircase, a large Cubist painting that caused a popular sensation at the Armory Show of 1913. When he arrived in New York City he was met by Walter Pach, the Armory Show’s principal European connection, who introduced him to Walter Arensberg, a wealthy American collector who had already purchased one version of the famous Nude and would later purchase the definitive version. Duchamp was soon living and painting in Arensberg’s spacious Upper West Side apartment.

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© 2008 David Haglund

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Haglund, D. (2008). Stevens, Duchamp and the American ‘ism’, 1915–1919. In: Eeckhout, B., Ragg, E. (eds) Wallace Stevens across the Atlantic. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230583849_9

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