The Blind Man was an art and Dada journal published briefly by the New York Dadaists in 1917.
Henri-Pierre Roché and Marcel Duchamp, visiting from France, organized the magazine with Beatrice Wood in New York City.
They published only one more issue, with the following contributors: Volume 2 is best known for the group's reaction to the rejection of Duchamp's Fountain by an unjuried art show in 1917.
After The Blind Man, Duchamp also launched another short-lived magazine, of which only a single issue was made, Rongwrong.
[1][2] As part of the Dada centennial celebrations, Ugly Duckling Presse published a 1000-copy, boxed-set, limited-edition facsimile of the two editions of The Blind Man, called The Blind Man: New York Dada, 1917.