|
Linda Dalrymple Henderson
Marcel Duchamp's The King and Queen Surrounded by Swift Nudes (1912)
and the Invisible World of Electrons
figure 1:
Marcel Duchamp,
The King and Queen Surrounded by Swift Nudes, 1912,
oil on canvas
Philadelphia Museum of Art,
The Louise and Walter Arensberg Collection
(Photo: Philadelphia Museum of Art).
Marcel Duchamp's well-known painting of early 1912, Nude
Descending a Staircase [No. 2] (fig. 2), stands as his first fully
figure 2:
Marcel Duchamp,
Nude Descending a
Staircase [No. 2], 1912,
oil on canvas
Philadelphia Museum of Art,
The Louise and Walter
Arensberg Collection
(Photo:
Philadelphia Museum of Art).
realized response to Cubism's
pursuit of the invisible realities
suggested by the discovery of
X-rays in 1895.1 At the same time,
Duchamp deliberately distinguished
that work from the Cubist style
by incorporating both a figure
in motion (virtually never seen in
Cubism) and the humorous implications of X-ray stripping (here
both the clothing and flesh of the nude disappear). After his
completion of the Nude in January, Duchamp's exploration of motion
and the invisible entered a new phase. In March 1912 he began a
series of works on paper on the theme of "Swift Nudes," which
culminated in his May 1912 painting The King and Queen Surrounded
by Swift Nudes (fig. 1). These preparatory works
include two pencil drawings, 2 Nudes: One Strong and One Swift of
March 1912 (fig.5) and The King and Queen Traversed by Swift Nudes
of April 1912 (fig. 6), and a watercolor and gouache study, The
King and Queen Traversed by Nudes at High Speed of April 1912
(Philadelphia Museum of Art, The Louise and Walter Arensberg
Collection).2 Having long eluded any interpretation beyond the
themes of speed, nudity, and chess suggested by their titles, this
series becomes far more meaningful when considered in the light of
contemporary science and, particularly, research related to
electrons and electricity.3
In contrast to what Duchamp termed the "static representation of
movement" in the Nude Descending a Staircase (Sweeney, "Eleven
Europeans" 20), the emphasis in these new works was on speed and
fluid motion. Duchamp's new interest in speed was undoubtedly
stimulated by the most dramatic artistic event of early 1912 in
Paris, the Italian Futurists' February exhibition at the Galerie
Bernheim-Jeune. From Marinetti's "Founding and Manifesto of
Futurism" of 1909, which dramatically extolled the "beauty of
speed" and "a racing car whose hood is adorned with great pipes,
like serpents of explosive breath" (Marinetti 21), through the
numerous paintings shown in the Futurists' exhibition treating
themes of modern transportation, Futurism glorified the intensity
and speed of modern experience. Indeed, Duchamp's small drawing, 2
Personages and a Car (Study) (fig. 3), may well be a response to
figure 3:
Marcel Duchamp,
2 Personages and a Car (Study), 1912,
oil on canvas
Philadelphia Museum of Art,
The Louise and Walter Arensberg Collection
(Photo: Philadelphia Museum of Art).
Futurist ideas as well as to
popular images of "automobilisme"
such as a 1906 Michelin advertisement that likewise emphasizes
speed by means of an automobile at a diagonal contrasted to a
stationary viewer (fig. 4).
figure 4:
E. Montaut,
Le Pneu Michelin a vainu le rail,
lithograph, n.d.
(Photo: Michelin Tire Corporation).
With its two flanking figures,
the drawing 2 Personages exhibits a
basic structural resemblance to
Duchamp's painting The King and
Queen Surrounded by Swift Nudes,
and it is likely the precursor of
the "Swift Nudes" series. As an
overt depiction of popular
technology, however, the drawing
is unusual among Duchamp's works.
Although the theme of the automobile would figure importantly in
his conception of the Bride in his major work, The Bride Stripped
Bare by Her Bachelors, Even (The Large Glass) (1915-23), on which
he would commence work in fall 1912 (fig. 11), Duchamp would never
again treat the automobile in such a specifically "Futurist"
manner. Instead, he left behind Futurist notions of speed to
explore a velocity far surpassing that of a mere machine: that of
the electron.
In 1897 J. J. Thomson had established the existence of
"corpuscles" of electricity, or electrons, in the course of his
cathode ray research.4 As a further stage in the "denuding" of
matter, electrons were widely studied by scientists and became the
subject of a surprising amount of popular literature as well.
Before examining what scientific literature may have offered
Duchamp on the subject of electrons as well as means to give
visual form to electricity, it is useful to review the artist's
own later statements on the significance of the "Swift Nudes"
series. In addition, Guillaume Apollinaire's discussion of
Duchamp's works of this period in his Les Peintres Cubistes of
1913 is revealing and supports the thesis that science had come to
play an increasingly central role in Duchamp's thinking.
In a 1962 interview Duchamp contrasted the King and Queen to his
Nude Descending a Staircase, explaining, "Here 'the swift nudes,'
instead of descending, were included to suggest a different kind
of speed, of movement--a kind of flowing around and between the
central figures. The use of nudes completely removed any chance of
suggesting an actual scene or an actual king and queen" (Kuh 88).
Later in the 1960s, in discussing the King and Queen painting
with Pierre Cabanne, Duchamp further distinguished the two works:
"Obviously the difference was the introduction of the strong nude
and the swift nude.... There was the strong nude who was the king;
as for the swift nudes, they were the trails which crisscross the
painting, which have no anatomical detail, no more than before"
(Cabanne 35). And, as he told Arturo Schwarz in the same period:
"I expected to render the idea of a strong king, or a male king
and a feminine queen, a female queen. And the nudes were not
anatomical nudes, rather things floating around the King and Queen
without being hampered by their materiality" (Schwarz 116).
Apollinaire's text on Duchamp was included in the second half of
Les Peintres Cubistes, in the midst of similar brief essays on
Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, and the circle of Puteaux Cubists
with which he was associated for a time. Since Duchamp had become
increasingly close to Apollinaire during later 1912, the critic's
remarks provide important clues to his thinking in this period.
Like the other new painters, Apollinaire notes, Duchamp "has
abandoned the cult of appearances"; "he uses forms and colors, not
to render appearances, but to penetrate the essential nature of
forms and formal colors." In contrast to his discussions of the
other Cubist painters, however, Apollinaire emphasizes Duchamp's
intellect, noting that he writes directly on the canvas "an
extremely intellectual title" and "is not afraid of being
criticized as esoteric or unintelligible" (47). According to
Apollinaire,
An art directed to wresting from nature, not
intellectual generalizations, but collective forms and
colors, the perception of which has not yet become
knowledge, is certainly conceivable, and a painter
like Marcel Duchamp is very likely to realize such an
art.
It is possible that these unknown, profound, and
abruptly grandiose aspects of nature do not have to be
aestheticized in order to move us; this would explain
the flame-shaped colors [l'aspect flammiforme des
couleurs], the compositions in the form of an N, the
rumbling tones, now tender, now firmly accented. These
conceptions are not determined by an aesthetic, but by
the energy of a few lines (forms or colors)....
Just as Cimabue's pictures were paraded through the
streets, our century has seen the airplane of Blériot,
laden with the efforts humanity made for the past
thousand years, escorted in glory to the Arts-et-
Métiers. Perhaps it will be the task of an artist as
detached from aesthetic preoccupations, and as
preoccupied with energy as Marcel Duchamp, to
reconcile art and the people. (Cubist Painters 47-48;
Peintres Cubistes 73-76)
Apollinaire included The King and Queen Surrounded by Swift Nudes
among the illustrations of Duchamp's works in Les Peintres
Cubistes, and his reference to "compositions in the form of an N,"
the basic structure of the King and Queen painting (fig. 1),
further links his comments to the "Swift Nudes" series. As with
Apollinaire's earlier reference to Duchamp's desire "to penetrate
the essential nature of forms," here the talk of "unknown,
profound, and abruptly grandiose aspects of nature" ("the
perception of which has not yet become knowledge"), of Duchamp's
"preoccupation with energy," and even the "flame-shaped colors"
points to electrons and the science of electromagnetism, as will
be seen. Further, Apollinaire provides a direct clue to one of
Duchamp's important sources of scientific information: the "Arts-
et-Métiers," the Conservatoire Nationale des Arts et Métiers and
its museum. Filled with the equipment of physics and chemistry as
well as recent technology (e.g., wireless telegraphy, automobiles,
and airplanes such as that of Louis Blériot who had crossed the
English Channel in 1909), the Arts et Métiers would have provided
a wealth of images and ideas for Duchamp.
Apollinaire was undoubtedly referring to Duchamp's growing
interest in science and technology (encoded in the phrase
"preoccupation with energy"), when he suggested that Duchamp might
be the one artist who could "reconcile art and the people." In
contrast to the "aesthetic preoccupations" of artists and the art
world, here was an artist who, like the average Frenchman, was
more excited by Blériot's airplane than by the masterpieces in the
Louvre. After 1912 Duchamp would execute only a few works in the
traditional medium of oil on canvas, and the equipment of science
and technology would come to play a central role in his image
making. In the end, however, reconciling art and people was not
Duchamp's goal in these works, which have more often than not
mystified their audience and concealed their specific scientific
or technological roots.
If Apollinaire's prediction was incorrect, his text nevertheless
provides a near-contemporary reflection of Duchamp's interests at
the time of the "Swift Nudes" series. Already in these works
aesthetic sources have been replaced by scientific ones, but it is
the processes uncovered by science and not yet the equipment of
science or technology on which Duchamp concentrates. Indeed,
Duchamp's drawings and paintings of spring 1912 and certain of
those of summer 1912 are unified by their debt to the scientific
developments Duchamp had first encountered in the extensive
literature on X-rays: electrons as studied in research on cathode
rays and radioactivity, as well as electric sparks.5
Unlike X-rays, the cathode rays that generated them had never
attracted widespread public attention. "Cathode rays have no
practical application" A. Dastre had declared in the Revue des
Deux Mondes in 1901 (695), never suspecting the central role
cathode ray tubes would come to play in the yet undeveloped field
of electronics--from television tubes to computer screens. Yet,
during the first decade of the century the electrons Thomson had
demonstrated to be the components of the "ray" flowing from the
cathode to the anode of a Crookes tube had gained increasing
attention. The existence of such infinitesimal particles, "less
than one-thousandth part of the mass of an atom of hydrogen"
stimulated much new theorizing about the nature of matter and
electricity (qtd. in Keller 66). Most importantly, as Thomson
concluded in 1897, atoms were not indivisible, as had been
thought, but contained "negatively electrified particles [that]
can be torn from them by the action of electrical forces" (66).
Beyond the insights Thomson and others continued to draw from
cathode ray research, the discovery of radioactivity and,
particularly, the contributions of Ernest Rutherford added
important new information to the puzzle of the atom during the
early years of the century.6 The beta "rays" Rutherford had
identified as one of the radioactive emissions were discovered to
be streams of electrons like cathode rays, and the alpha "rays"
were found to be positively charged particles. Thus, the popular
literature on radioactivity and, in France especially, the related
writings of Gustave Le Bon, such as his best-selling L'Évolution
de la matière of 1905, further stimulated interest in atom theory
and electrons. It was suggested that the electron might be the
fundamental unit of all matter, or, as Sir Oliver Lodge, the
widely published British physicist, declared in 1904, "Matter then
appears to be composed of positive and negative electricity and
nothing else."7
Physics now offered a new challenge to the imagination of the
artist, the invisible reality of the electron within the atom.
Despite the "hopeless invisibility of an atom" (Williams 117),
there were certain themes that emerged from scientific and popular
discussions of the electrons composing cathode rays and
radioactive beta emissions. Indeed, the image of electrons as
projectiles whizzing at enormous velocities dominated popular
discussions of cathode rays from 1896 onward. And, once Thomson's
experiments determined that the speed of the electron was over
10,000 kilometers per second and it was subsequently determined
that radioactive beta emissions traveled even faster, figures as
high as 100,000 miles (160,000 kilometers) per second and more
were regularly cited as electron velocities.8
There were also a number of hypothetical models of atomic
structure put forward, including Thomson's conception of electrons
embedded throughout the atom like pieces of plum in a plum
pudding. Others proposed structures of the planetary type, which
Rutherford would establish experimentally and announce in March
1911, clarifying at the same time the small size of the central
area of positive charge (i.e., the nucleus) in relation to the
atom as a whole.9 Thus, in the decade before Rutherford's
announcement, the general analogy of the atom to the solar system
was already widely discussed in the writings of figures such as
Lodge and Joseph Larmor, as well as Jean Perrin, Le Bon, and
others. For example, Lucien Poincaré writes in his survey of
contemporary physics, La Physique moderne, son evolution of 1907:
The atom may be regarded as a sort of solar system in
which electrons in considerable numbers gravitate
around the sun formed by the positive ion.... The
phenomena of the emission of light compels us to think
that the corpuscles revolve round the nucleus with
extreme velocities, or at the rate of thousands of
billions of evolutions per second. It is easy to
conceive from this that, notwithstanding its
lightness, an atom thus constituted may possess an
enormous energy. (286)
That such a realm could offer stimulation to a writer or artist is
confirmed in an October 1908 article in Mercure de France entitled
"Histoire extraordinaire des Électrons." The author, Georges
Matisse, begins his text by recalling Henri Poincaré's remark on
assuming the presidency of the Société Française de Physique
several years before that it was "a great source of joy, of pure
intellectual satisfaction to be able to follow the fantastic
progress of physical science at the beginning of the twentieth
century" (744). Matisse continues, arguing that physics is indeed
"full of marvelous tales":
One of these especially seems made to bring to the soul of the
artist the "pure intellectual satisfaction" of which Poincaré
speaks: it is called, I believe, Extraordinary adventures or
Theory of electrons. Electrons are charming, petite beings who
recall the elves and trolls of Scandinavia. They are extremely
tenuous: 1000 times smaller than the hydrogen atom, say some;
2,000 times, claim others.... Large numbers of these electrons,
dressed in negative electricity, are the subjects of a king for
whom they form the court. This monarch is a large atom wearing a
cloak of positive electricity, not a common atom, but the
quintessence which remains after a certain number of light and
"short-skirted" particles have detached themselves from him.
Around the royal highness hover and whirl his courtiers, negative
electrons, who waltz rapidly in his presence. (744)
Matisse's text then adds the idea of a queen as well as the
dematerialization of matter posited by Le Bon:
Observing them [the electrons], it is impossible not to think of
the charming fairy scene of Giselle, conceived by Theophile
Gautier.... All night [the spirits] dance furiously, flying and
whirling around their queen. Untiringly, they continue to dance
until dawn, when they disappear into the plants from which they
had emerged. Our electrons are like them: after having agilely
turned about for a certain time, they disappear, recombine
themselves and return into the atom from which they had left. J.
J. Thomson has calculated "the mean duration of freedom"--one
might say the life--of a corpuscle. This life is very short,
shorter than that of the ephemerids; however, many are reborn
after their death.... M. Gustave Le Bon has wondered if some
family relationship does not exist among ordinary atoms, ions,
electrons, X-rays, and energy. Well, if so, there is an intimate
one: matter dematerializes little by little; it disincarnates
itself, as a spiritist would say. An atom becomes an ion, an ion
becomes an electron, then an X-ray, and, finally, energy and
ether. (744-45)
After further discussion of the wonders of electrons, Matisse
concludes with the affirmation, "Rejoice with Poincaré that we
live in the twentieth century: this will be the century of
electrons" (746). Such imaginative, anthropomorphic discussions of
electrons surely lie behind Duchamp's conception of the series
culminating his painting The King and Queen Surrounded by Swift
Nudes. In Matisse's article, in particular, the inclusion of
Poincaré's statement that recent physics is a potential source of
"pure intellectual satisfaction" was tailor-made for Duchamp at
this moment. Already an admirer of Poincaré, he was now determined
"to get away from the physical aspect of painting" and "to put
painting once again at the service of the mind" (Sweeney, "Eleven
Europeans" 20).
There is a striking conjunction between electron theory as
presented in sources such as Matisse's article and Duchamp's own
statements on the "Swift Nudes." As described by Matisse,
electrons are not only swift, they are nude--"dressed in negative
electricity." These courtiers, "a procession of rapidly moving
nudes" ("French Artists" 3), as Duchamp described them in 1915,
flow around and between the central figures, including, as Duchamp
stated, "the strong nude who was the king" (Cabanne 35).10 In the
context of electrons and atom theory, the "strong nude" in
Duchamp's first drawing of the series, 2 Nudes: One Strong and One
Swift (fig. 5), suggests not only a king but also the strong
figure 5:
Marcel Duchamp,
2 Nudes: One Strong
and One Swift, 1912
pencil on paper,
Private Collection, Paris
positive charge at the
center of the atom that
binds the swift negative
electrons in their
whirling orbits.11
In subsequent drawings the "Swift Nudes" become accessories to a
royal pair, a king and queen (associated also with chess),
"surrounding" or "traversing" them, "without being hampered by
their materiality," as Duchamp later explained (Schwarz 116). The
figure 6:
Marcel Duchamp,
The King and Queen
Traversed by Swift Nudes,
1912, pencil on paper
Philadelphia Museum of Art,
The Louise and Walter
Arensberg Collection
(Photo:
Philadelphia Museum of Art).
term "traverse" was the standard term in discussions of the
activity within an atom by Rutherford, Perrin, and others.12
Duchamp's words also bring to mind Matisse's talk of electrons
detaching themselves from and reentering the sphere of the atom's
charge and his subsequent discussion of the dematerialization of
matter. The "Swift Nudes" are "unhampered by [the] materiality" of
the king and queen, just as Le Bon, basing himself on Lodge,
Larmor, Hendrik Lorentz, and others, asserted that the electron
"has no property in common with matter, except a certain inertia
varying with the velocity, [and] is more like ether than matter
and forms a transition between them" (Le Bon, "L'Énergie" 498-99).
In this view, the electron was indeed a "bare" charge.
Le Bon saw the material atom as an "enormous condensation" of
"intra atomic energy" ("L'Énergie" 493) in the gradual process of
dematerializing back into the ether, as electrons and other
radioactive emissions escaped from the atom. Matisse's text noted
the formation of ions (an atom or molecule that has lost or gained
electrons and is thus positively or negatively charged) as a stage
in this process. Duchamp's later reference to "trails which
crisscross the painting" further strengthens the interpretation of
the "Swift Nudes" as charged particles or electrons. Although in
spring 1912 it would have been quite early for Duchamp to have
known of the British scientist C. T. R. Wilson's "cloud chamber,"
Wilson's work in tracing the paths of ionising particles offers an
interesting parallel to Duchamp's concerns in the "Swift Nudes"
series.
Wilson had collaborated with J. J. Thomson in the 1890s in his
research on the ionization of gases by X-rays, and in 1911 it was
Wilson's cloud chamber that enabled Rutherford to determine the
characteristic paths of the various radioactive emissions.13 In
the cloud chamber Wilson was able to produce water condensation
around the ions generated by the passage of charged particles or
X-rays, resulting in vapor trails that could be recorded
photographically (fig. 7). In his first publication of two such
figure 7:
C.T.R. Wilson,
"Cloud Formed on Ions Due to Alpha-Rays,"
from "On a Method of Making Visable the Paths of
Ionising Particles Through a Gas,"
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London,
85 (Nov. 1911), fig.1.
photographs in November 1911, "On a Method of Making Visible the
Paths of Ionising Particles Through a Gas," Wilson had referred to
his images as the "tracks" of individual particles and the "traces
of ions" left by them.14 Yet, it is hard to imagine how Duchamp in
spring 1912 would have known of this first Wilson article in the
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, an article apparently
not noted in popular literature. The same language, nonetheless,
occurs in a far more elaborate Wilson article of December 1912,
complete with nineteen examples of "instantaneous photography,"
which Duchamp in his subsequent work on the Large Glass project
does seem likely to have encountered directly or indirectly.15
Duchamp's reference to "trails" may stand as a later confirmation
of the intention he shared with Wilson to manifest the invisible
realm of the electron and other subatomic particles.
In a 1946 interview discussing the Nude Descending a Staircase,
Duchamp had emphasized the notion of decomposing forms "along the
lines the cubists had done." "But I wanted to go further--much
further--in fact in quite another direction altogether," he
continued (Sweeney, "Eleven Europeans" 19). Beyond the previously
invisible realm for which X-rays had provided new visual clues,
Duchamp in the "Swift Nudes" series undertook the ultimate
decomposition of form--that of matter itself. As he stated later,
"Before the Nude my paintings were visual. After that they were
ideatic..." (Roberts 46). Like the suprasensible fourth dimension
of space that also intrigued him, the world of electrons was
beyond visual perception and required that Duchamp "recreat[e]
ideas in painting," as he said (Sweeney, "Eleven Europeans" 20).16
That Duchamp tried several different means to evoke the invisible
speeding electrons is apparent from the differing manifestations
of the "nudes" in the successive drawings and the final painting
of the "Swift Nudes" series. The amorphous form of the Swift Nude
at the right of the 2 Nudes drawing (fig. 5) becomes in the next
drawing (fig. 6) and in the watercolor and gouache study in the
Philadelphia Museum a more tubular structure, projecting a fluid
or flamelike "substance." Commentators have noted the strongly
phallic quality of the forms, especially in figure 6, and their
relation to the menacing projectiles in the Munich drawing First
Study for: The Bride Stripped Bare by the Bachelors (Musée
National d'Art Moderne, Paris).17 In the latter work the sexual
encounter that was to be the theme of the Large Glass is given its
most literal treatment, with the almost robotic Bachelors at left
and right aggressively brandishing phallic weapons that suggest
lances or guns.18
Surprisingly, both the growing sexual overtones of the series and
the ballistic aspect of the "Swift Nudes" and Bachelors can be
linked to electrons and electricity. The sexually suggestive
language of electrical theory and practice was to be at the core
of Duchamp's Large Glass project. Already, X-rays had produced a
kind of electrical stripping of female figures, and now in certain
works of the "Swift Nudes" series, Duchamp associated the rapidly
flowing, newly denuded electrons with phallic emissions,
emphasizing their aggressive, projectile character (fig. 6).
Indeed, the literature on electrons emphasized exactly this
ballistic, bullet-like nature.
Before Thomson's identification of the electron in 1897, the
nature of cathode rays had still been uncertain. One view, strong
among German scientists, was that they really were "rays" or ether
waves akin to light; William Crookes and other British scientists,
on the other hand, believed that the stream flowing from the
cathode to the anode of a Crookes tube was a kind of "molecular
bombardment" at high velocity (Poincaré 261). Crookes conducted a
number of experiments to prove his theory of bombardment, and
these were regularly illustrated and discussed in sources on X-
rays as well as cathode rays.19 One of the most famous of these
was his "mill wheel" or "paddle wheel" supported on two glass rods
within a Crookes tube (fig. 8), which was set into motion as it
figure 8:
Crooke's Mill Wheel for Demonstrating
Cathode Ray Bombardment, from Charles-Edouard Guillaume,
Les Rayons X et la photographie à travers les corps
opaques, Paris, 1896, fig.7.
was struck by the cathode ray's stream of particles. Moving back
and forth according to the direction of current flow into the
tube, Crookes's mill wheel may have also been an antecedent at the
scale of laboratory equipment for Duchamp's "Water Mill Wheel" in
the Large Glass (fig. 11). In 1912, however, it was most important
as part of the by-then standard interpretation of cathode rays as
bombarding electrons, "projected like bullets" ("Photographie de
l'invisible" 50) and producing "blows of an appreciable
proportion" (Dastre 694).
By 1913, in his preparatory works for the Large Glass and in the
Glass itself, Duchamp would turn increasingly to the actual
equipment of science, such as Crookes tubes, assuming the role of
amateur scientist as he speculated on the laws of his "Playful
Physics" (Duchamp, Writings, 49) and chemistry. However, in 1912
he still sought to make visible the stream of electrons whose
presence was confirmed by the mechanical effect of the turning
mill wheel or by the glow of the gas in a Crookes tube. How to
depict electricity was the challenge. As Georges Bohn declared in
his review of Poincaré's L'Électricité in Mercure de France in
1907, "Our senses, so poorly adapted to the exterior world, remain
mute with regard to electricity" (Bohn, "Mouvement" 140). Yet
there was one visual manifestation of electricity upon which
Duchamp could draw--the electric spark or discharge, the
laboratory version of the electrical effects embodied in
lightning.
Electric sparks and discharges were not simply the subject of
physics books in this period, when electricity had captured the
imagination of the public. In particular, the engineer Nikola
Tesla, born in Croatia but working in the United States from 1884
onward, had produced spectacular flamelike electrical discharges
in widely publicized demonstrations in America and Europe in the
1890s. Tesla was not only a brilliant inventor but also a
visionary and a showman who made science intriguing to the public.
He had lectured before the Société Française de Physique in Paris
in 1892, and his stature as a prominent international figure
assured his presence in a variety of both scientific and popular
French sources on X-rays and other aspects of contemporary science
and technology as well as in occult-oriented publications.
Tesla was well known to the public for his work with high
frequency alternating currents and the dramatic sparking
discharges he was able to generate. Figure 9 is drawn from an
figure 9:
Pump for Extracting Electricity
from the Earth, from J. d'Ault,
Les Merveilles électriques de M. Tesla,
Revue des Revues 13 (May 1895):197.
article, Les Merveilles électriques de M. Tesla, published in La
Revue des Revues in May 1895. Electric sparks (and lightning) are
produced by the ionization of gases in the air as electron
distributions alter with the buildup of electrical charge. Tesla
created these conditions by means of a Tesla coil or oscillation
transformer, stepping up the alternating current to 100,000 volts,
with frequencies as high as a million cycles a second. As
illustrated in figure 9, Tesla's high frequency perturbation of
the earth's magnetic field drew forth the "superb sparks" for
which he was famous and which were regularly described as "flames"
in discussions of his work.20
Such "flaming" sparks, best known to the public by means of
Tesla's showmanship but also available to Duchamp by means of any
standard discussion of the physics of electricity (including Le
Bon's L'Évolution de la matière), would have offered a means to
evoke the speeding invisible electrons.21 Apollinaire in Les
Peintres Cubistes had referred to "l'aspect flammeforme" or
flamelike quality of Duchamp's colors, and the projection from the
phallic opening left of center in figure 6 as well as the
Philadelphia watercolor study is quite flamelike. In the final
painting of The King and Queen Surrounded by Swift Nudes (fig.1),
the flickering flow of nudes from lower right to upper left is
composed of segmented forms akin to those of the bodies of the
king and queen. Yet, the second stream of nudes across the top of
the painting) is far more evanescent and sparklike and is painted
blue, a color that had come to be associated with electricity by
means of the recently coined term "electric blue."22
If "electric" flames and sparks served as models for Duchamp's
iconography of electricity in the final painting of The King and
Queen Surrounded by Swift Nudes, he had already included another,
more literal scientific sign for electricity in his drawing The
King and Queen Traversed by Swift Nudes (fig. 6). Here the
figure 6:
Marcel Duchamp,
The King and Queen
Traversed by Swift Nudes,
1912, pencil on paper
Philadelphia Museum of Art,
The Louise and Walter
Arensberg Collection
(Photo:
Philadelphia Museum of Art).
flamelike stream of electrons is surrounded by a succession of
circles suggesting the magnetic field that is generated around a
wire carrying a current. Images such as figure 10, which
figure 10:
Corkscrew Rule,
from Silvanus P. Thompson,
Leçons élémentaires
d'électricité et de
magnétisme, Paris, 1898, fig. 108.
illustrate the "Corkscrew Rule" or "Right-Hand Rule," were (and
are) a standard element of any discussion of the reciprocal
relation between electric current and magnetism. Thus, whether the
straight arrow represents current flow and the circle the
direction of magnetic force around it (as it would seem in fig.6),
or the arrow represents a metal rod with a wire spiraling around
it in the direction indicated by the circle, "the direction of the
current and that of the resulting magnetic force are related to
one another, as are the rotation and the forward travel of an
ordinary (right-handed) corkscrew" (Thompson, lesson 16). Similar
circular or spiraling imagery would continue to serve Duchamp in
several subsequent works as an indicator of the presence of
electricity or electromagnetism.23
Duchamp's The King and Queen Surrounded by Swift Nudes was one of
the last oil paintings on canvas in which he attempted to give
visual form to invisible processes. After producing a series of
paintings and drawings in Munich during July-August 1912, in which
he developed the form of the Bride for the Large Glass (fig. 11,
upper left), he essentially ceased painting on canvas except for a
few works on the theme of the Chocolate Grinder centered in the
bottom panel of the Glass. He now took a job as a librarian at the
Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève, where he continued the scientific
self-education he had already begun and commenced making hundreds
of notes for the project. During later 1912 through 1914 Duchamp
transformed himself from a practitioner of the craft of painting
to a kind of artist-engineer or "inventor" (Kuh 83), a word he
used frequently in later interviews to describe his approach to
art making. And he found important role models in the writers
Alfred Jarry and Raymond Roussel, whose creative invention had
likewise been nourished by turn-of-the-century science and
technology.24
figure 11:
Marcel Duchamp,
The Bride Stripped Bare
by Her Bachelors, Even
(The Large Glass). 1915-1923,
oil, varnish, lead wire,
lead foil, mirror silvering,
and dust on two glass panels
(cracked), each mounted
between two glass panels,
with five glass strips,
tinfoil, and a wood and
steel frame,
109 1/4 x 69 1/4 in.
(277.5 x 175.8 cm.),
Philadelphia Museum of Art,
Bequest of Kathrine S. Dreier
(Photo:
Philadelphia Museum of Art).
In The Bride Stripped Bare by
Her Bachelors, Even (fig. 11)
Duchamp sought to create a humorous "reality which would be
possible by slightly distending the laws of physics and
chemistry," as he described it in one of his notes (Writings 71).
For this elaborate allegory of quest, Duchamp drew on science and
technology as well as geometry to create the "collisions" between
the incommensurable realms of the three-dimensional, gravity bound
Bachelors below and a four-dimensional etherial Bride above.25 The
complex scenario of the Large Glass is filled with ballistic
collisions at all scales--from subatomic and molecular to the
impact of the Nine Shots aimed at the "target" in the Bride's
realm. In contemporary work on the kinetic theory of gases, for
example, Duchamp would have found both a scientific analogue for
his own growing interest in chance and a model of incessant
collision, documented convincingly in this period by the work of
Jean Perrin on Brownian motion. Like the molecular drama he enacts
in the context of the liquefaction of the Bachelors' semen-like
"Illuminating Gas," many of the events of the "Playful Physics" of
the Glass are scientific metaphors for the overarching collision
between the desire of the Bachelors and the position of the Bride,
high above them and forever beyond their reach.
The style of the Large Glass also declared Duchamp's move beyond
Cubism and even the invisible worlds depicted in the "Swift Nudes"
series. In the King and Queen Surrounded by Swift Nudes painting
he had actually incorporated several dotted lines as subtle signs
of his interest in a non-"arty" line (Sweeney, "Conversation"
129), free of the touch and taste of the artist. Now Duchamp
pursued assiduously a "painting of precision" (Writings 30),
executing the Large Glass in lead wire on two glass panels (nine
feet tall) in a cool precise style derived from mechanical
drawing. Instead of the painterly evocation of invisible speeding
electrons, he utilized elements based on the equipment of science
and technology as metonymical signs for his scientific content.
Those visual signs, joined with the elaborate verbal program in
his notes, made it possible to create his ideal work of art as
"the diagram of an idea" (Charbonnier 59).
In the Large Glass Duchamp left behind the Cubist-oriented
transparency and fluidity as well as the preoccupation with
depicting motion that had initially signaled his avant-garde
status in 1912. His adoption of a mechanical drawing style,
unorthodox materials, and the imagery of science and technology--
as well as his note making-marked his definitive break with the
reigning avant-garde in painting. Just as his writing of the title
on the King and Queen painting had been read by Apollinaire as
evidence of his intellect, Duchamp now modeled himself on Leonardo
da Vinci, incorporating note making as an appropriate activity of
the artist. Indeed, he would always consider his written notes to
be as important as the physical Glass itself and would publish
three sets of notes in facsimile during his lifetime: the Box of
1914, the 1934 Green Box, and the 1966 A l'infinitif.26 Yet, The
King and Queen Surrounded by Swift Nudes had been a crucial
transitional moment, representing Duchamp's first engagement with
scientific content (i.e., electron theory) that went beyond the
highly popular X-rays known to every layperson. As such, the
painting and its preparatory drawings were crucial gestures of his
self-fashioning as an intelligent artist who had moved beyond the
mere physical aspect of painting to put art "once again at the
service of the mind."27
|