Marcel Duchamp

Bicycle Wheel

New York, 1951 (third version, after lost original of 1913)

Metal wheel mounted on painted wood stool

Not on view

Duchamp produced the original version of Bicycle Wheel in Paris in 1913, two years before he first employed the term “readymade” for works that were selected, rather than crafted, by the artist. He described Bicycle Wheel simply as something he enjoyed having in the studio: “I liked it, like when one has a fire in the fireplace, something moving while you stare.” The original did not survive; Duchamp produced this replica at the request of Sidney Janis, who included it in an exhibition at his gallery in New York in 1951. Janis’s son, Carroll, recollected that the wheel for the replica was sent from Europe, and the kitchen stool was bought by his father in Brooklyn.

Gallery label from

Marcel Duchamp, April 12–August 22, 2026

Publication excerpt from MoMA Highlights: 375 Works from The Museum of Modern Art, New York (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 2019)

Though Bicycle Wheel predates Marcel Duchamp’s use of the word “readymade”—a term he coined after moving from Paris to New York in 1915—it is the earliest example of this class of groundbreaking artworks. Like most of Duchamp’s existing readymades, MoMA’s Bicycle Wheel is a later version of an earlier creation, made for a 1951 exhibition at the Sidney Janis Gallery in New York. As was his penchant at that point in his career, Duchamp found others to do much of the work for him: Sidney Janis, the gallery’s owner, selected the bicycle wheel while in Paris and found the stool in Brooklyn, and Duchamp put the two together. What mattered to Duchamp was the transmission of a readymade’s concept, not its exact physical appearance.

Bicycle Wheel distinguishes itself from all of the artist’s subsequent readymades by virtue of its central object’s implicit movement, a quality Duchamp appreciated for its calming effects. “To see that wheel turning,” he once remarked, “was very soothing, very comforting, a sort of opening of avenues on other things than material life of every day. I liked the idea of having a bicycle wheel in my studio. I enjoyed looking at it, just as I enjoyed looking at the flames dancing in a fireplace. It was like having a fireplace in my studio.”

Medium Metal wheel mounted on painted wood stool
Dimensions 51 x 25 x 16 1/2" (129.5 x 63.5 x 41.9 cm)
Credit The Sidney and Harriet Janis Collection
Object number 595.1967.a-b
Department Painting & Sculpture

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Marcel Duchamp

Marcel Duchamp

American, born France. 1887–1968 188 works online

When Marcel Duchamp created his most famous work—the industrially produced urinal Fountain —it was largely ignored. Fountain was the high point of Duchamp’s campaign to dismantle and expand the boundaries of what constitutes a work of art; it had begun four years earlier, when he asked, “Can one make works that are not ‘of art’?

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