The titles of the 1912 paintings suggest a change from a chaste to a sexually active life. In one of his notes Duchamp described Le Grand Verre as a skeleton on an X-ray and called it a retard en verre, a delay in glass, identifying its components in an associative, poetic way, a "wasp with a secretion of love gasoline" and referring to the "sparks of the desire magnet." This mechanized view of sex is also present in the Mariée, where the figure appears to be constructed from an assortment of engine parts and internal organs and is is painted in the same way, without expression and with the precision of a technical draughtsman.
On his return to Paris in the autumn of 1912 he gave the painting to his friend Francis Picabia, the husband of Gabrielle Buffet, the woman he was secretly in love with and whom he may have had in mind when he was devising the bride.
The titles of the 1912 paintings suggest a change from a chaste to a sexually active life. In one of his notes Duchamp described Le Grand Verre as a skeleton on an X-ray and called it a retard en verre, a delay in glass, identifying its components in an associative, poetic way, a "wasp with a secretion of love gasoline" and referring to the "sparks of the desire magnet." This mechanized view of sex is also present in the Mariée, where the figure appears to be constructed from an assortment of engine parts and internal organs and is is painted in the same way, without expression and with the precision of a technical draughtsman.
On his return to Paris in the autumn of 1912 he gave the painting to his friend Francis Picabia, the husband of Gabrielle Buffet, the woman he was secretly in love with and whom he may have had in mind when he was devising the bride.