Man Ray, silver chess set, 1926, silver plated and oxidized
silver plated brass. Tallest piece is 4 inches.
LONG ISLAND CITY, N.Y. - "The Imagery of Chess Revisited," on
view at The Noguchi Museum from October 21 through March 5, is the
first major museum exhibition to explore and reprise one of the
legendary events in the history of Twentieth Century arts: the
1944-45 exhibition "The Imagery of Chess," organized by surrealist
masters Marcel Duchamp and Max Ernst for the Julien Levy Gallery,
in New York City.
The two artists, both serious chess players, invited a "who's
who" of their avant-garde contemporaries to redesign the standard
chess set or create works that otherwise explored the imagery and
symbolism of chess. In addition to Duchamp and Ernst,
participants included such famous European expatriates and
soon-to-be famous American modernists as Alexander Calder,
Arshile Gorky, Man Ray, Robert Motherwell, Isamu, Noguchi, Yves
Tanguy and Dorothea Tanning. A resounding popular and critical
success, the event marked a turning point in America's embrace of
modernism, which signaled the shift from Paris to New York as the
proving ground for avant-garde art.
"The Imagery of Chess Revisited" reunites, for the first time in
60 years, some 40 works from this historic gallery show,
including 12 of the original 13 chess sets, as well as numerous
documentary photographs of the exhibition. Also on view will be
approximately 40 additional chess-themed works by the show's
participants. Over the years, the objects included in the
original exhibition became widely scattered and some of them were
irretrievably lost. The latter are represented in the current
exhibition by carefully researched reproductions.
By 1944, many leaders of the avant-garde in Europe had
congregated in New York as refugees from Fascism and war,
capturing the American public's attention with their
unconventional art and lifestyles and exerting a powerful
influence on young American artists engaged in their own
explorations of modernism.
Julien Levy, who opened his gallery on West 57th Street in 1931,
was in the vanguard of American dealers who befriended these
émigré artists and promoted the latest developments in both
European and American art. He invited Max Ernst and Marcel
Duchamp to organize a group project on the theme of chess to be
held in his gallery that winter, from December 12, 1944, through
January 31, 1945.
Works by participants in the Levy show represent an astonishingly
wide range of artistic styles, media and meanings. While some
chose to create chess sets that explored formal problems of
design and functionality, others created works that alluded,
often in strikingly contemporary and personal ways, to the
historical associations of chess as a game of war or as a
metaphor for amorous conquest.
The exhibition includes 11 works by Duchamp, the acknowledged
chess master of the group, including his tiny "Wallet Chess Set,"
roughly six by four inches; a series of wall maquettes for
various chess pieces, exhibited for first time since the Levy
show; two copies of his book of endgame chess scenarios,
Opposition and Sister Squares Are Reconciled, 1932, one
inscribed by Duchamp, the other with a one-of-a-kind Plexiglas
and wood veneer binding; and, shown publicly for the first time,
letters and diagrams that Duchamp sent to Levy, offering advice
on various chess problems.
For chess aficionados, one of the most historically important
works on view, also included in the Levy show, is a wooden chess
set made in 1924 by Bauhaus designer Josef Hartwig. The first
modernist chess set to be commercially produced and distributed,
it is still sold worldwide today.
Works by Alexander Calder include a whimsical chess set fashioned
to found objects, including sofa legs and bat handles and a
recently rediscovered portfolio of ribald, chess-inspired
drawings entitled "Knightmares." French Surrealist Andre Breton's
submission, another "found object" chess set, utilized glasses
filled with varying amounts of red or white wine.

Attributed to George Platt Lynes, "Julien Levy Playing Chess
with the Isamu Noguchi Set," 1944 black and white photographic
print.
A number of works in the Levy show drew parallels between the
game of chess and the deadly serious war being played out in Europe
and the Pacific. The most astonishing of these was a Surrealist
assemblage by Swiss-born designer Xanti Schawinsky, meticulously
replicated from documentary photographs for the present exhibition,
which featured a network of criss-crossing strips of clear Lucite
suspended above a table top chess set. Suggesting a chessboard
under aerial bombardment, the work was undoubtedly inspired by
Schawinsky's work for the US military.
French artist Jean Helion, recently escaped as a prisoner of war,
created drawings of chess pieces wrapped in barbed wire.
Seemingly a prescient warning of the horrors of war to come,
Alberto Giacometti's 1932 sculpture "On ne Joue plus (No More
Play)" is a marble slab, pocked with fox holelike craters and
barren except for two lone cemetery markers. While this work was
not in the Levy exhibition, it was in the dealer's private
collection and doubtlessly inspired his own chessboard design.
Noguchi's chess set and table, described by Newsweek as
"the most beautiful piece in the [Levy] show," is an early
example of the artist's translation of sculptural ideas into
functional forms. The table, a recent acquisition by The Noguchi
Museum, is made of joined pieces of black veneered plywood
contoured into curving angular shapes. The original chess pieces,
molded from red and green plastic, will be represented by
replicas made especially for this exhibition. Also on view will
be a series of Noguchi's "biomorphic" sculptures, stylistic
outgrowths of his 1944 chess ensemble.
Occupying a renovated industrial building dating from the 1920s,
the Noguchi Museum, 32-37 Vernon Boulevard, comprises ten indoor
galleries and an outdoor sculpture garden.
For information, www.noguchi.org.