this post was submitted on 01 Jun 2026
1 points (100.0% liked)

Art

11 readers
2 users here now

Welcome to c/Art, a community for artists and art lovers alike. We hope to create a supportive space for humans passionate about art, artists, and its creation. Computer-Rendered-Artificial-Pictures (A.I.) are not welcome.

Rules

  1. This is an English-language community. Comments should be in English. Posts can link to non-English news sources when providing a full-text translation in the post description. Automated translations are fine, as long as they don’t overly distort the content.

  2. Credit must be given to the artist. Give the title of the artwork and year if possible.

  3. No links to misinformation, commercial advertising, or A.I. Generated content.

  4. Be kind to each other, and argue in good faith. Don’t post direct insults nor disrespectful and condescending comments. Don’t troll nor incite hatred.

  5. No bigotry, sexism, racism, antisemitism, islamophobia, dehumanization of minorities, et cetera. Strive to post insightful comments. Add “/s” when you’re being sarcastic (and don’t use it to break rule no. 4).

  6. Don’t evade bans. If we notice ban evasion, that will result in a permanent ban for all the accounts we can associate with you.

(This list may get expanded as necessary.)

founded 1 month ago
MODERATORS
 

Sherrie Levine The New York artist Sherrie Levine is famous for appropriating artworks by others as her own, much as Marcel Duchamp appropriated a commercial urinal as his sculpture. But when she riffed on “Fountain,” she told me, she altered her source a fair bit. She’d found an ancient urinal in a shop — “I thought, ‘Wow, that’s beautiful,’ so I bought it, not knowing what I was going to do with it” — then had it cast in bronze and polished. She likes the “preciousness” this process added to Duchamp’s original, which can come off as simply abject. Also important: Her golden metal looks openly expensive, while Duchamp’s porcelain can pretend to be modest, although a 1964 replica sold at Sotheby’s in 1999 for $1.7 million. That’s what a Fort Knox gold bar goes for today — something Duchamp might have loved.

Alex Schweder Where Duchamp turned a real working urinal into a hands-off sculpture, the New York artist Alex Schweder collaborated with Kohler, the bathroom company, to turn toilets into sculptures meant to be plumbed for use.

“Duchamp took a functional work and created shock by putting it an art context, but I’m arriving at a similar affect by putting an artwork in daily spaces,” Schweder told me.

Duchamp’s nonfunctioning “Fountain” seemed to avoid any obvious aesthetics, while Schweder said that “Peescapes” adds aesthetics, giving waste a roundabout detour as it heads for the drain. Another innovation of Schweder’s: Since “Fountain” is so unavoidably wrapped up in maleness, he thought to design a new version that women could use.

Maurizio Cattelan In 2016, the Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan had a real toilet cast from more than 200 pounds of 18-carat gold, then installed it in a bathroom at the Guggenheim Museum in New York for any art lover to use. “He took an object out of the world and placed it into art. I took it back into the world and gave it a price,” Cattelan told me. “Duchamp asked what art is. I asked what it’s worth.”

A piece that screamed value was tempting: In 2019, while on loan to Blenheim Palace in England, it was stolen. The thieves were caught, but the piece, estimated to be worth about $4 million, never reappeared: It looks as though it got sold for (golden) scrap. And Cattelan went on to duct-taped bananas.

Ai Weiwei The photograph “Letgo,” by the Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei, was inspired by a moment when the Lego company, in Denmark, refused to supply Ai with three million plastic bricks he’d planned to use in an immersive environment featuring portraits of human-rights activists. Ai used knockoff building blocks from China instead (he’s often made work about Chinese industry), but decided to commemorate Lego’s refusal in a Duchamp-inspired image that sent plastic bricks down the drain. “Like Duchamp, I treat everything as a readymade,” Ai told me. “His readymades might be a urinal or a coat hook; mine are the realities of contemporary politics and culture.”

Ai said that, in the course of his career, Duchamp has been the “most significant influence and a decisive factor; no one else has played a comparable role.” Many other artists might say the same.

no comments (yet)
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
there doesn't seem to be anything here