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On Periodization: What Does "Post-Duchamp" Mean?
Author(s) -
Thierry de Duve
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
ars
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2178-0447
pISSN - 1678-5320
DOI - 10.11606/issn.2178-0447.ars.2021.188234
Subject(s) - periodization , fountain , monarchy , art , history , art history , visual arts , ancient history , politics , political science , law
When we speak of a post-Duchamp art world, we raise a particularly vexing periodization problem. Marcel Duchamp’s readymades, and the famous/infamous urinal titled Fountain in particular, have signaled that a sea change has occurred in the art world, which was not a change in styles but rather in aesthetic regimes, not a change in art movements but rather in art institutions, a change which, mutatis mutandis, is as radical as the passage from monarchy to republic, yet a change which art history books have not recorded yet, as such. Without addressing it in full, my paper recalls the steps that made me aware of this periodization problem.

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