Marcel Duchamp im Interview mit Richard Hamilton
und G. Heard, ohne Datum
Audio Arts Magazine, Vol. 2, No. 4
Die BBC sendete in ihrem dritten Programm in der Reihe “Art,
Anti-Art“ ein Interview von George Heard und Richard Hamilton:
“Marcel Duchamp Speaks“. Charles Mitchell gab einen
kurzen Kommentar dazu.
"This recording made in 1959 of an interview by Richard Hamilton
in London and George Heard Hamilton in New York with Marcel Duchamp
is a unique and rare opportunity to listen to the artist talk and
answer questions about his work, motivation as an artist and views
in retrospect on the ’Large Glass’, ’readymades’
and subsequent philosophies built up around him. The following topics
are amongst those discussed; readymades, bicycle wheel, bottle dryer,
snow shovel, phial of Paris air, origins of Dada, large glass, Courbet,
reactions against the retinal conception of painting, Muybridge,
Futurists, Bala and so on. The immediate impact of this tape is
the ease with which Duchamp articulates often complex issues surrounding
his work with immense clarity and simplicity" (Covertext).
Aus der selben Reihe stammt das Interview mit Hermann Nitsch, 1975.
"During 1964 Hermann Nitsch with fellow artists Otto Mühl
and Günter Brus founded in Austria the ’Vienna Institute
for Direct Art’. From 1965, the group organzied a series of
events concerned with drawing attention to violent and suppressed
tendencies within the human mind. Controversy and social irritation
built up around the artists and their activities which were seen
as bizarre rituals, with slaughtered animals used in perfomances,
blood and flesh being smeared over participants. In this recording
made during lunch at the Basle art fair in June 1975, Nitsch talks
generally about his work, its sources and influences on his thinking
including Jung, Eastern philosophy and Nietzsche, then goes on to
describe a new work being planned; a twenty-four-hour feast! (with
Charles Merrill)" (Covertext).
|