Marcel Duchamp 14

Based on an iconic photograph of Marcel Duchamp with his Bicycle Wheel, Marcel Duchamp 14 revisits a canonical image of twentieth-century art through a restrained pictorial language. The work forms part of Davis Lisboa’s ongoing exploration of archive, authorship, and the museum as an artistic form.

The Taylor Smith Collection, Indianapolis, USA.

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Davis Lisboa, Marcel Duchamp 14, 2018. Oil on canvas, 40 × 40 × 3.5 cm / 15.75 × 15.75 × 1.38 in.

Taking as its point of departure an iconic black-and-white photograph of Marcel Duchamp alongside his Bicycle Wheel, Marcel Duchamp 14 returns to a central image of twentieth-century art through the material and temporal distance of painting. Rather than reconstructing the photographic document, the work subjects it to a restrained pictorial translation, in which image, surface, and memory remain suspended in a state of quiet tension.

The composition is structured through the visual logic of the archive and of reproduction, sustaining a precise tension between clarity and dissolution. Its restrained tonal range and the slight instability of the image evoke the ambiguous condition of the document once translated into oil, when it ceases to function as fixed evidence and instead acquires a more open presence, situated between trace, interpretation, and historical persistence.

As in other works by Davis Lisboa, art history appears here not as a repertoire of citations, but as an active system of transmission. Duchamp’s figure is situated within a genealogy of artists who integrated the museum, the archive, or institutional fiction into the very core of their practice, among them Marcel Duchamp with his Boîte-en-valise, Robert Filliou with his Galerie Légitime, and Marcel Broodthaers with his Musée d’Art Moderne, Département des Aigles. From this perspective, the Painting Section of Davis Museum Barcelona brings together both portraits of these artists and representations of their works, constituting a body of work articulated around the relationship between authorship, archive, museum, and image.

Executed in oil on canvas, the work belongs to the artist’s Blue Period (2016–2018) and forms part of the Painting Section of Davis Museum Barcelona. Within Lisboa’s practice, painting functions simultaneously as image, document, and museological extension, situating each work within a rigorous continuity between contemporary representation and institutional form.

The Taylor Smith Collection, Indianapolis, USA.

Additional information

Weight 2.5 kg
Dimensions 40 × 40 × 3.5 cm