The Dada Reader: A Critical AnthologyDawn Ades University of Chicago Press, 2006 - 320 pagina's The revolutionary Dada movement, though short-lived, produced a vast amount of creative work in both art and literature during the years that followed World War I. Rejecting all social and artistic conventions, Dadaists went to the extremes of provocative behavior, creating "anti-art" pieces that ridiculed and questioned the very nature of creative endeavor. To understand their movement's heady mix of anarchy and nihilism--combined with a lethal dash of humor--it's essential to engage with the artists' most important writings and manifestos. And that is is precisely where this reader comes in. Bringing together key Dada texts, many of them translated into English for the first time, this volume immerses readers in some of the most famous (and infamous) periodicals of the time, from Hugo Ball's Cabaret Voltaire and Francis Picabia's 391 to Marcel Duchamp's The Blind Man and Kurt Schwitters's Merz. Published in Europe and the United States between 1916 and 1932, these journals constituted the movement's lifeblood, communicating the desires and aspirations of the artists involved. In addition to providing the first representative selection of these texts, The Dada Reader also includes excerpts from many lesser-known American and Eastern European journals. Compiled with both students and general readers in mind, this volume is necessary reading for anyone interested in one of the most dynamic and influential movements of the twentieth century. |
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... Tristan Tzara ' Note for the Bourgeoise ' Guillaume Apollinaire ' Tree ' Emmy Hennings ' Song to the Dawn ' Emmy Hennings ' Morphine ' 12 15 16 20 21 22 23 23 Tristan Tzara ' Dada Review No.2 ' 24 Wassily Kandinsky ' Looking and ...
... Tristan Tzara ' Atrocities of Arthur and 176 Trumpet and Deep - Sea Diver ' 5.8 No.10 , December 1919 A Necessary Act 177 Tristan Tzara ' Open Letter to Jacques Riviere ' 177 5.9 No.12 , February 1920 Francis Picabia ' Scare Me Daddy ...
... Tristan Tzara recited Rumanian verse . A balalaika orchestra played delightful Russian folk songs and dances . I had a lot of support and sympathy from Mr M. Slodki , who designed the poster for the cabaret , and from Mr Hans Arp , who ...
Inhoudsopgave
Hugo Ball Editorial | 20 |
Blaise Cendrars Crepitations | 26 |
4 | 35 |
Copyright | |
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