Apolinère Enameled

Apolinère Enameled
Artist Marcel Duchamp
Year 1916-17 (1916-17)
Medium Gouache and graphite on painted tin, mounted on cardboard
Dimensions 24.4 cm × 34 cm (9.6 in × 13 in)
Location Philadelphia Museum of Art
Accession 1950-134-73

Apolinère Enameled was painted c. 1916 by Marcel Duchamp, as a heavily altered version of an advertisement for paint ("Sapolin Enamel").[1] The picture depicts a girl painting a bed-frame with white enamelled paint. The depiction of the frame deliberately includes conflicting perspective lines, to produce an impossible object. To emphasise the deliberate impossibility of the shape, a piece of the frame is missing. The piece is sometimes referred to as Duchamp's "impossible bed" painting.

See also

  1. Philadelphia Museum of Art. "Apolinère Enameled". Retrieved 16 April 2014.

External links


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