Seven Dada Manifestos and LampisteriesCalder Publications, 2003 - 118 pagina's Tristan Tzara—poet, literary iconoclast, and catalyst—was the founder of the Dada movement that began in Zürich during World War I. His ideas were inspired by his contempt for the bourgeois values and traditional attitudes towards art that existed at the time. This volume contains the famous manifestos that first appeared between 1916 and 1921 that would become the basic texts upon which Dada was based. For Tzara, art was both deadly serious and a game. The playfulness of Dada is evident in the manifestos, both in Tzara's polemic—which often uses dadaist typography—as well as in the delightful doodles and drawings contributed by Francis Picabia. Also included are Tzara's Lampisteries, a series of articles that throw light on the various art forms contemporary to his own work. Post-war art had grown weary of the old certainties and the carnage they caused. Tzara was on the cutting edge at a time when art was becoming more subjective and abstract, and beginning to reject the reality of the mind for that of the senses. |
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... be placed beside the other forms of the new mechanism of the religions of the interregnum . Is simplicity simple , or dada ? I consider myself rather likeable . Tristan Tzara Is poetry necessary ? I know that those who shout 34 III.
... be placed beside the other forms of the new mechanism of the religions of the interregnum . Is simplicity simple , or dada ? I consider myself rather likeable . Tristan Tzara COLONIAL SYLLOGISM No one can escape fate No one can 50.
Inhoudsopgave
Monsieur Antipyrines Manifesto | 1 |
Unpretentious Proclamation | 15 |
Monsieur AA the Antiphilosopher sends us this Manifesto | 27 |
Copyright | |
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Seven Dada Manifestos and Lampisteries Tristan Tzara,Francis Picabia,Barbara Wright Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2011 |