Showing posts with label Theatre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Theatre. Show all posts

Friday, 13 August 2010

Art Is Dead.........

“Art is dead. Long live Dada.” - Walter Serner

"Dada means nothing. We want to change the world with nothing.” - Richard Huelsenbeck

"I have forced myself to contradict myself in order to avoid conforming to my own taste." - Marcel Duchamp 


"Art Comes First" - S.L, S.M, P.B.

“Art has nothing to do with taste. Art is not there to be tasted.” - Max Ernst 

 “What is generally termed reality is, to be precise, a frothy nothing.” - Hugo Ball


“We do not wish to imitate nature, we do not wish to reproduce. We want to produce. We want to produce the way a plant produces its fruit, not depict. We want to produce directly, not indirectly. Since there is not a trace of abstraction in this art we call it concrete art.” - Hans Arp 

“I wish to blur the firm boundaries which we self-certain people tend to delineate around all we can achieve.” - Hannah Hoch
 

Friday, 9 July 2010

Dada & Dadaism


Dadaism: Historical Overview.
excerpt from "The Dada Archive"
by Timothy Shipe
Curator, International Dada Archive
[www.finitesite.com]

Contemporary art as we know it could not have come into existence without Dada. Virtually every artistic principle and device which underlies the literature, music, theater, and visual arts of our time was promoted, if not invented, by the Dadaists: the use of collage and assemblage; the application of aleatory techniques; the tapping of the artistic resources of the indigenous cultures of Africa, America, and Oceania; the extension of the notion of abstract art to literature and film; the breaking of the boundaries separating the different art forms from one another and from "everyday life"; the notion of art as performance; the expropriation of elements of popular culture; the notion of interaction or confrontation with the audience--everything which defines what we loosely call the "avant-garde."

One would be hard pressed to name an artistic movement since 1923 which does not, at least in part, trace its roots to Dada: Surrealism, Constructivism, Lettrism, THE BEAT POETS, Pop- and Op-Art, Conceptual Art, Minimalism, Punk Rock and even ACF.

But the effects of Dada are not limited to the world of the arts; its impact on contemporary life has been felt from the streets of Chicago to Madison Avenue. The style of political protest which came to the forefront in the late sixties--mock trials, Yippies, Guerrilla theater--can readily be traced back to the actions of the Dadaists in Zurich during the First World War. And commercial advertising as we know it today is indebted to the Dadaists' experiments with collage and typography; indeed, two members of the Berlin Dada group founded a "Dada Advertising Agency," and the Hanover Dadaist Kurt Schwitters designed newspaper and magazine advertisements which pioneered techniques we now take for granted.