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      Home  >  General News  >  The genius of Duchamp?

      The genius of Duchamp?

      Larry Evans, Marcel DuChamp


      Larry Evans on chess: Marcel Duchamp’s vexing problem
      August 10, 2008

      “There is no solution, because there is no problem,” quipped Marcel Duchamp. In a recent issue of The Sienese Shredder, Francis Neumann discussed this diagram composed by Duchamp for a New York exhibition in 1943.

      Many years ago Neumann also submitted it to my column in Chess Life, offering a reward of $15 to anyone who either could solve it or prove there was no possible solution. “I have since subjected this problem to the most powerful computers and I am now convinced that Duchamp has given us, in effect, a problem with no solution.”

      The position was accompanied by an image of a Cupid with a bow and arrow. “Closer examination revealed that something is printed on the opposite side of the paper: below Duchamp’s signature in red ink one can faintly read the words ‘White to Play and Win.’ To chess enthusiasts this phrase can mean only one thing: a problem to solve in which White is instructed to move first and eventually win the game,” continued Neumann.

      Duchamp presents us with a hint of its solution: a Cupid aiming his arrow. Cupid is, of course, the mythological god of love and his arrow is usually aimed in the direction of an amorous target; a direct hit can cause the recipient to fall deeply and blindly in love.

      Here is the full story.

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      4 Comments

      1. Anonymous Reply
        August 10, 2008 at 12:42 pm

        Judging from the board setup in the picture, Duchamp was playing Fischer Random Chess – before it was invented!

      2. Paul Serrano Reply
        August 10, 2008 at 2:20 pm

        But the Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel online doesn’t have an illustration of the position either. That’s not a problem without a solution; that’s teasing without pleasing.

      3. Anonymous Reply
        August 10, 2008 at 2:50 pm

        The puzzle — and an analysis of it — is at this link .

      4. sad clown Reply
        August 10, 2008 at 3:59 pm

        “Anonymous said…
        Judging from the board setup in the picture, Duchamp was playing Fischer Random Chess – before it was invented!”

        No, it was his Alzheimers acting up.

        “That’s not a problem without a solution; that’s teasing without pleasing.”

        Actually if you look at his face carefully, you will see the satisfied visage of an old man who just farted.

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