Spring 2026 belongs to Marcel Duchamp in New York. Alongside MoMA’s major retrospective, Gagosian is inaugurating its new Upper East Side space with a masterly exhibition. By taking over the legendary 980 Madison Avenue, Larry Gagosian pays tribute to the father of conceptual art in the very building where the artist exhibited over sixty years ago.

The Resurrection of the Readymades
Running from April 25 to June 27, 2026, the show highlights Duchamp’s famous “readymades.” It features the rare series of 14 replicas created in 1964 by the artist and Arturo Schwarz.
Mind Over Matter: Fountain and L.H.O.O.Q.
Masterpieces such as “Fountain” and the mustachioed Mona Lisa, “L.H.O.O.Q.,” are on display. These once-ordinary objects redefined art by prioritizing intellectual intent over the artist’s hand.


A Historic Moment for the Art Market
The centerpiece for collectors is the “Bicycle Wheel” (1964 version). It is the only surviving example from this edition not yet held by a major international institution, underscoring the extreme rarity of the collection.
Full Circle at 980 Madison Avenue
This building formerly housed the Cordier & Ekstrom gallery, where these replicas made their US debut in 1965. For Gagosian, this is a strategic homecoming, reasserting his grip on the New York art scene.

The Living Legacy of Subversion
Duchamp is the root of Minimalism, Pop Art, and Fluxus. By displaying “found” objects in one of the world’s most luxurious neighborhoods, Gagosian highlights the artist’s enduring subversive power.

A Dialogue Between MoMA and Madison Ave
The exhibition creates a unique bridge between institutional history and the elite art market, proving that in 2026, Duchamp’s legacy is as provocative as ever.
A century later, the readymades still challenge the definition of “art.” With this inauguration, Gagosian proves that the dialogue started by Duchamp is far from over—it is the very engine of modern creativity.



