In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

1 1 “sensation of sensations” On the wintry streets of Manhattan, the foot traffic to see the greatest art exhibition in America had been discouragingly slow. The 1913 “Armory Show” had opened on February 17. It had begun with a gala party, a band, and speeches. The unveiling of provocative Parisian art followed. The newspapers had trumpeted the exhibit opening, but even so, the public was not coming. Then something changed. By the second week crowds began to flock. The public had caught wind of what one newspaper called a “sensation of sensations.” It was a single painting among nearly 1,300 canvases and sculptures. The sensation of sensations was a Cubist painting of a fractured figure moving down a stair, a picture that was given its greatest allure by the title, Nude Descending a Staircase. No one really noticed the name of the French artist. He was twenty-five-year-old Marcel Duchamp, who at that time was back in Paris, oblivious to all the Manhattan uproar. The Nude hung in the same space, Gallery I, as did a so-so Cubist painting, Woman with a Mustard Pot, by a slightly better known Pablo Picasso. The foreign names did not matter as much for the American public as the avant-garde’s sheer bravado in this new modern art, filled with its apparent jokes and breach of cultural etiquette. For Americans, this was exactly what was to be expected from the “wild men” of Paris.1 By the measure of controversy, Duchamp’s Nude was a crowd pleaser, apparently worthy of national attention. The image was not obviously a nude, or even a man or woman, but a human-like figure, a splintery wooden skeleton, coming down a stair as if twenty separate snap shots were overlapped. For a young artist like Duchamp, it was a striking and innovative work. It was his first chance to outshine Picasso and, in that sense, the Armory Show was also the first competitive encounter between the life and work of the two artists. By public acclaim, in this round, Duchamp came out the winner. The splintering Nude established Duchamp’s foothold in America. The exhibition was held at the Sixty-ninth Regiment Armory building 2 || picasso and the chess player in midtown Manhattan, a vast space used for troop parade drills.2 On the outside of the fortress-like building hung a banner reading, “International Exhibition: Modern Art.” The inside was partitioned by themes and decorated with bright bunting and yellow streamers, dull burlap, potted plants, and hanging green garlands. The so-called “Cubist Room” was at the back of the gauntlet of spaces, a place that the newspapers, tongue in cheek, called the “Chamber of Horrors.” At the center of this chamber was Nude Descending a Staircase, described by one critic as “an explosion in a shingle factory,” and parodied in another newspaper as “The Rude Descending a Staircase,” a cartoon about chaos on a subway stair. The great exhibition also featured European painters from Francisco Goya up to the Impressionists and beyond, making it an object lesson on art, worthy of serious reviews as well. However, the Armory was at heart a mass-media event, geared to drawing crowds, selling tickets, and titillating the public. With its publicity in the hands of a seasoned newspaperman , the exhibit sent press releases nationwide and modern art postcards flooded New York (including a postcard of Duchamp’s Nude). Newsrooms around the country were mailed an Armory Show press photo, indeed a photograph of, yet again, Marcel Duchamp, who is shown with two brothers , also artists in France. The International Exhibition of Modern Art, for all of its circus atmosphere , marked a turning point in American awareness of modern art—the Armory Show was the first major importation of the new things happening in Europe, where a movement recently dubbed “Cubism” had emerged. One of the New York exhibition’s central goals had been to promote American artists by putting them alongside their European forebears, a plan that somewhat backfired.3 Although the Armory Show marked the start of serious collecting of modern art in the United States, the American painters and sculptors ended up disappointed. The Europeans received the publicity and sold most of the artwork. The import of the European avant-garde to New York City had set an important precedent nevertheless, for in future decades, the hub of modern art and the modern art museum would shift to Manhattan. Through the...

Share