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Marcel
Duchamp, Etant donnés: 1º la chute d'eau / 2º le gas d'éclairage,
1946-66
© 2000 Succession Marcel Duchamp ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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First you have to get
far enough back from everything. How ridiculous to let any taboos linger.
Having smashed the king of all taboos we looked around to see if anyone
else had smashed through as well. Not exactly. Not yet. But had our old
friend also sought to defy death? Had he constructed an architectural
surround to return to? If "after all death is always only for others,"
should not the ironic artist, first off, busy himself with a tomb for
himself?!? Revitalizing tombs are Mallarmé's specialty. His " Tomb of
Baudelaire" serves as point of departure, framing context, and signaling
scaffolding for Marcel Duchamp's heroic but limited, for being local and
self-contained, effort to fit himself a tomb. His "Etant Donnés, involving,
it would now appear, a returning to this world, might better bear the
title " Encore Etant Donnés" or "To Return To.*"
*Title of a critical
essay on Etant Donne by Madeline Gins and Arakawa
Click here
for video (QT 0.7MB)
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Madeline Gins
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Etant Pris
D. drinks M. drinking
B.--drinks-toasts.
Muddy ruby-filled brew.
Pubis, liquid, illuminating
gas.
Eternal afternoons------
of cities without night.
Symbols that gaze back
at . . . . . . .
Forests of gazing-back
symbols--
Dried foliage--
The bec Auer and its
predecessor the bec papillon--
or the butterfly or bat's wing burner
The wick's desire .
. . to be put . . . inserted.
M. Gins
Click here
for video (QT 0.7MB)
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Madeline Gins
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Marcel
Duchamp, Marcel Duchamp as Rrose Sélavy, 1921
© 2000 Succession Marcel Duchamp ARS, N.Y./ADAGP, Paris
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Being
Taken---Having Taken It To Be |
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by
S. Mallarmé or R. Sélavy |
Nature is a temple
Whose living pillars
Release confused words
Perfumes, colors, sounds
Are everywhere let loose
All over the place
Humans pass there
Traversing forests of symbols
Which observe them with
A gaze akin to a familiar regard
M. Gins
[Note: Italized words
that come up from the last stanza
of Baudelaire's poem, Correspondances, to invade its first stanza
plus all those that exceed the usual bounds of translation.]
Click here
for video (QT 0.5MB)
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Madeline Gins
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"The Tomb of Charles
Baudelaire"
The buried temple divulges
from its sepulchral mouth
Sewerage: mud and rubies
Abominably an Anubis
The whole of its muzzle aflame with wild ferocious baying
Or that [as] the [most] recent gas twists the squinty wick,
A sweeper away,
one knows, of infamies undergone,
It ignites a haggard immortal pubis
Whose flight moves up and off according to movements
Within and off out from the gas street lamp.
What dried-out foliage
in "les cités sans soir"*
Votive, could bless like her, she, in her settling down again
Vainly against the marble vainly of Baudelaire
In the veil that wraps
her around, absent with shivers,
Always to breathe
This, she, his Shade
Even if it be a tutelary poison
from which…of which…we perish.
by Stéphane Mallarmé
first translated by Roger Fry
adjusted and retranslated
by Madeline Gins
Etant Pris
D. drinks M. drinking
B.--drinks-toasts.
Muddy ruby-filled brew.
Pubis, liquid, illuminating
gas.
Eternal afternoons------
of cities without night.
Symbols that gaze back
at . . . . . . .
Forests of gazing-back
symbols--
Dried foliage--
The bec Auer and its
predecessor the bec papillon--
or the butterfly or bat's wing burner
The wick's desire .
. . to be put . . . inserted.
M. Gins
Telescopic/Paralll
Malic Moulds |
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by Rrose Sélavy |
Charles Baudelaire 1821-1867
Arthur Rimbaud
1854-1891
Henri Poincaré 1854-1912
Stéphane Mallarmé 1871-1898
Marcel Duchamp 1887-1968
M.Gins
Poincaré's Infra-thin
A.
Because
we cannot
a curve
without width
and must a straight
line
under the form of
a rectilinear band
having breadth.
But well know these
lines have no width.
Have them be narrower
and narrower
thus to approach the
limit;
so we do in a certain
measure,
but we shall never attain
this limit.
Always picture these
two narrow bands,
one straight, one
curved,
in a position such that
they encroach slightly
one upon the other
without crossing.
A hand made of paper
and a hand made of gentle
breeze
were made to shake hands
so that zeroing in on
the as-always oversized
triggering-zero might
keep narrow. . . .
B. [tangent at infra-thin]
A high-tension non-wire
The tension needed to
hold the image of a line.
The width of this line
shall not exceed the posited non-width.
The tension needed to
hold the thought-the breaking into thinking--
of a line.
The-tension-needed-to-hold-the-image-of-a-line's
width, non-width,
or near-non-width.
The-tension-needed-to-hold-the-thought-of-a-line.
T-T-T . . . te te te
te te
A cross-sectional slice,
a shaving, a would-shaving of
...tentativeness....
M.Gins
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