[Inscribed] Duchamp, Androgyny, Etc...
Small format book consisting of two short essays and a third performance text by art critic, artist, gallery director, and teacher Robert C. Morgan wherein the author weighs the meaning of Duchamp in a contemporary context, investigating the concept of androgyny (bride, bachelors) and attempting to demonstrate how contact with the banality of events in the everyday world can resonate with meaning. Published in 1990 by Editions Antoine Candau. Slim 8vo (5” x 8.5”), wrappers, 50 pages, with text in English in one direction and French in the other. Inscribed on one half title page by the author to art collectors and gallerists Marc and Livia Straus. Light rubbing and soiling to extremities.
Small format book consisting of two short essays and a third performance text by art critic, artist, gallery director, and teacher Robert C. Morgan wherein the author weighs the meaning of Duchamp in a contemporary context, investigating the concept of androgyny (bride, bachelors) and attempting to demonstrate how contact with the banality of events in the everyday world can resonate with meaning. Published in 1990 by Editions Antoine Candau. Slim 8vo (5” x 8.5”), wrappers, 50 pages, with text in English in one direction and French in the other. Inscribed on one half title page by the author to art collectors and gallerists Marc and Livia Straus. Light rubbing and soiling to extremities.
Small format book consisting of two short essays and a third performance text by art critic, artist, gallery director, and teacher Robert C. Morgan wherein the author weighs the meaning of Duchamp in a contemporary context, investigating the concept of androgyny (bride, bachelors) and attempting to demonstrate how contact with the banality of events in the everyday world can resonate with meaning. Published in 1990 by Editions Antoine Candau. Slim 8vo (5” x 8.5”), wrappers, 50 pages, with text in English in one direction and French in the other. Inscribed on one half title page by the author to art collectors and gallerists Marc and Livia Straus. Light rubbing and soiling to extremities.