In the arts and in literature, the term avant-garde (advance guard and vanguard)
identifies a genre of art, an experimental work of art, and the
experimental artist who created the work of art, which usually is
aesthetically innovative, whilst initially being ideologically
unacceptable to the artistic establishment of the time. The military metaphor of an advance guard identifies the artists and writers whose innovations in style, form, and subject-matter challenge the artistic and aesthetic validity of the established forms of art and the literary traditions of their time; thus how the artists who created the anti-novel and Surrealism were ahead of their times.
As a stratum of the intelligentsia
of a society, avant-garde artists promote progressive and radical
politics and advocate for societal reform with and through works of art.
In the essay "The Artist, the Scientist, and the Industrialist" (1825) Benjamin Olinde Rodrigues's political usage of vanguard identified the moral obligation of artists to "serve as [the] avant-garde" of the people, because "the power of the arts is, indeed, the most immediate and fastest way" to realise social, political, and economic reforms.
In the realm of culture, the artistic experiments of the avant-garde push the aesthetic boundaries of societal norms, such as the disruptions of modernism
in poetry, fiction, and drama, painting, music, and architecture, that
occurred in the late 19th and in the early 20th centuries. In art history the socio-cultural functions of avant-garde art trace from Dada (1915–1920s) through the Situationist International (1957–1972) to the postmodernism of the American Language poets (1960s–1970s).
History
The French military term avant-garde (advanced guard) identified a reconnaissance unit who scouted the terrain ahead of the main force of the army. In 19th-century French politics, the term avant-garde (vanguard) identified Left-wing political reformists who agitated for radical political change in French society. In the mid-19th century, as a cultural term, avant-garde identified a genre of art that advocated art-as-politics, art as an aesthetic and political means for realising social change in a society. Since the 20th century, the art term avant-garde identifies a stratum of the Intelligentsia that comprises novelists and writers, artists and architects et al. whose creative perspectives, ideas, and experimental artworks challenge the cultural values of contemporary bourgeois society.
In the U.S. of the 1960s, the post–WWII changes to American culture and
society allowed avant-garde artists to produce works of art that
addressed the matters of the day, usually in political and sociologic
opposition to the cultural conformity inherent to popular culture and to consumerism as a way of life and as a worldview.
Theories
In The Theory of the Avant-Garde (Teoria dell'arte d'avanguardia, 1962), the academic Renato Poggioli provides an early analysis of the avant-garde as art and as artistic movement.
Surveying the historical and social, psychological and philosophical
aspects of artistic vanguardism, Poggioli's examples of avant-garde art,
poetry, and music, show that avant-garde artists share some values and
ideals as contemporary bohemians.
In Theory of the Avant-Garde (Theorie der Avantgarde, 1974), the literary critic Peter Bürger looks at The Establishment's
embrace of socially critical works of art as capitalist co-optation of
the artists and the genre of avant-garde art, because "art as an
institution neutralizes the political content of the individual work [of
art]".
In Neo-avantgarde and Culture Industry: Essays on European and American Art from 1955 to 1975 (2000), Benjamin H. D. Buchloh argues for a dialectical approach to such political stances by avant-garde artists and the avant-garde genre of art.
Sociologically, as a stratum of the intelligentsia of a society, avant-garde artists, writers, architects, et al. produce artefacts — works of art, books, buildings — that intellectually and ideologically oppose the conformist value system of mainstream society. In the essay "Avant-Garde and Kitsch" (1939), Clement Greenberg said that the artistic vanguard oppose high culture and reject the artifice of mass culture, because the avant-garde functionally oppose the dumbing down of society — be it with low culture or with high culture.
That in a capitalist society each medium of mass communication is a
factory producing artworks, and is not a legitimate artistic medium;
therefore, the products of mass culture are kitsch, simulations and simulacra of Art.
Walter Benjamin in the essay "The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction" (1939) and Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer in the Dialectic of Enlightenment (1947) said that the artifice of mass culture voids the artistic value (the aura) of a work of art. That the capitalist culture industry (publishing and music, radio and cinema, etc.) continually produces artificial culture for mass consumption,
which is facilitated by mechanically produced art-products of mediocre
quality displacing art of quality workmanship; thus, the profitability
of art-as-commodity determines its artistic value.
In The Society of the Spectacle (1967), Guy Debord said that the financial, commercial, and economic co-optation of the avant-garde into a commodity produced by neoliberal capitalism
makes doubtful that avant-garde artists will remain culturally and
intellectually relevant to their societies for preferring profit to
cultural change and political progress. In The Theory-Death of the Avant-Garde (1991), Paul Mann
said that the avant-garde are economically integral to the contemporary
institutions of the Establishment, specifically as part of the culture industry. Noting the conceptual shift, theoreticians, such as Matei Calinescu, in Five Faces of Modernity: Modernism, Avant-garde, Decadence, Kitsch, Postmodernism (1987), and Hans Bertens in The Idea of the Postmodern: A History (1995), said that Western culture entered a post-modern time when the modernist ways of thought and action and the production of art have become redundant in a capitalist economy.
Parting from the claims of Greenberg in the late 1930s and the insights of Poggioli in the early 1960s, in The De-Definition of Art: Action Art to Pop to Earthworks (1983), the critic Harold Rosenberg
said that since the middle of the 1960s the politically progressive
avant-garde ceased being adversaries to artistic commercialism and the
mediocrity of mass culture,
which political disconnection transformed being an artist into "a
profession, one of whose aspects is the pretense of overthrowing [the
profession of being an artist]."
Avant-garde is frequently defined in contrast to arrière-garde, which in its original military sense refers to a rearguard force that protects the advance-guard. The term was less frequently used than "avant-garde" in 20th-century art criticism. The art historians Natalie Adamson and Toby Norris argue that arrière-garde is not reducible to a kitsch style or reactionary
orientation, but can instead be used to refer to artists who engage
with the legacy of the avant-garde while maintaining an awareness that
doing so is in some sense anachronistic. The critic Charles Altieri argues that avant-garde and arrière-garde are interdependent: "where there is an avant-garde, there must be an arrière-garde."
There is another definition of "Avant-gardism" that distinguishes
it from "modernism": Peter Bürger, for example, says avant-gardism
rejects the "institution of art" and challenges social and artistic
values, and so necessarily involves political, social, and cultural
factors. According to the composer and musicologist Larry Sitsky,
modernist composers from the early 20th century who do not qualify as
avant-gardists include Arnold Schoenberg, Anton Webern, and Igor
Stravinsky; later modernist composers who do not fall into the category
of avant-gardists include Elliott Carter, Milton Babbitt, György Ligeti, Witold Lutosławski, and Luciano Berio, since "their modernism was not conceived for the purpose of goading an audience."
The 1960s saw a wave of free and avant-garde music in jazz genre, embodied by artists such as Ornette Coleman, Sun Ra, Albert Ayler, Archie Shepp, John Coltrane and Miles Davis. In the rock music of the 1970s, the "art" descriptor was generally understood to mean "aggressively avant-garde" or "pretentiously progressive". Post-punk artists from the late 1970s rejected traditional rock sensibilities in favor of an avant-garde aesthetic.
Whereas the avant-garde has a significant history in 20th-century
music, it is more pronounced in theatre and performance art, and often
in conjunction with music and sound design innovations, as well as
developments in visual media design. There are movements in theatre
history that are characterized by their contributions to the avant-garde
traditions in both the United States and Europe. Among these are Fluxus, Happenings, and Neo-Dada.
Dada (/ˈdɑːdɑː/) or Dadaism was an art movement of the European avant-garde in the early 20th century, with early centres in Zürich, Switzerland, at the Cabaret Voltaire (in 1916), founded by Hugo Ball with his companion Emmy Hennings, and in Berlin in 1917. New York Dada began c. 1915,and after 1920 Dada flourished in Paris. Dadaist activities lasted until the mid 1920s.
There is no consensus on the origin of the movement's name; a common story is that the German artist Richard Huelsenbeck slid a paper knife (letter-opener) at random into a dictionary, where it landed on "dada", a colloquial French term for a hobby horse. Jean Arp wrote that Tristan Tzara invented the word at 6 p.m. on 6 February 1916, in the Café de la Terrasse in Zürich.
Others note that it suggests the first words of a child, evoking a
childishness and absurdity that appealed to the group. Still others
speculate that the word might have been chosen to evoke a similar
meaning (or no meaning at all) in any language, reflecting the
movement's internationalism.
The roots of Dada lie in pre-war avant-garde. The term anti-art, a precursor to Dada, was coined by Marcel Duchamp around 1913 to characterize works that challenge accepted definitions of art. Cubism and the development of collage and abstract art would inform the movement's detachment from the constraints of reality and convention. The work of French poets, Italian Futurists and the German Expressionists would influence Dada's rejection of the tight correlation between words and meaning. Works such as Ubu Roi (1896) by Alfred Jarry and the ballet Parade (1916–17) by Erik Satie would also be characterized as proto-Dadaist works. The Dada movement's principles were first collected in Hugo Ball's Dada Manifesto in 1916. Ball is seen as the founder of the Dada movement.
Dada was an informal international movement, with participants in
Europe and North America. The beginnings of Dada correspond with the
outbreak of World War I. For many participants, the movement was a
protest against the bourgeoisnationalist and colonialist
interests, which many Dadaists believed were the root cause of the war,
and against the cultural and intellectual conformity—in art and more
broadly in society—that corresponded to the war.
Avant-garde circles outside France knew of pre-war Parisian
developments. They had seen (or participated in) Cubist exhibitions held
at Galeries Dalmau, Barcelona (1912), Galerie Der Sturm in Berlin (1912), the Armory Show in New York (1913), SVU Mánes in Prague (1914), several Jack of Diamonds exhibitions in Moscow and at Moderne Kunstkring, Amsterdam (between 1911 and 1915). Futurism developed in response to the work of various artists. Dada subsequently combined these approaches.
Many Dadaists believed that the 'reason' and 'logic' of bourgeois capitalist
society had led people into war. They expressed their rejection of that
ideology in artistic expression that appeared to reject logic and
embrace chaos and irrationality. For example, George Grosz later recalled that his Dadaist art was intended as a protest "against this world of mutual destruction".
According to Hans Richter Dada was not art: it was "anti-art". Dada represented the opposite of everything which art stood for. Where art was concerned with traditional aesthetics, Dada ignored aesthetics. If art was to appeal to sensibilities, Dada was intended to offend.
Additionally, Dada attempted to reflect onto human perception and the chaotic nature of society. Tristan Tzara
proclaimed, "Everything is Dada, too. Beware of Dada. Anti-dadaism is a
disease: selfkleptomania, man's normal condition, is Dada. But the real
Dadas are against Dada".
As Hugo Ball
expressed it, "For us, art is not an end in itself ... but it is an
opportunity for the true perception and criticism of the times we live
in."
A reviewer from the American Art News
stated at the time that "Dada philosophy is the sickest, most
paralyzing and most destructive thing that has ever originated from the
brain of man." Art historians have described Dada as being, in large
part, a "reaction to what many of these artists saw as nothing more than
an insane spectacle of collective homicide".
Years later, Dada artists described the movement as "a phenomenon
bursting forth in the midst of the postwar economic and moral crisis, a
savior, a monster, which would lay waste to everything in its path...
[It was] a systematic work of destruction and demoralization... In the
end it became nothing but an act of sacrilege."
To quote Dona Budd's The Language of Art Knowledge,
Dada was born out of negative reaction to the horrors of the First World War. This international movement was begun by a group of artists and poets associated with the Cabaret Voltaire
in Zürich. Dada rejected reason and logic, prizing nonsense,
irrationality and intuition. The origin of the name Dada is unclear;
some believe that it is a nonsensical word. Others maintain that it
originates from the Romanian artists Tristan Tzara's and Marcel Janco's
frequent use of the words "da, da," meaning "yes, yes" in the Romanian
language. Another theory says that the name "Dada" came during a meeting
of the group when a paper knife stuck into a French–German dictionary happened to point to 'dada', a French word for 'hobbyhorse'.
The creations of Duchamp, Picabia, Man Ray, and others between 1915 and 1917 eluded the term Dada at the time, and "New York Dada"
came to be seen as a post facto invention of Duchamp. At the outset of
the 1920s the term Dada flourished in Europe with the help of Duchamp
and Picabia, who had both returned from New York. Notwithstanding,
Dadaists such as Tzara and Richter claimed European precedence. Art
historian David Hopkins notes:
Ironically, though, Duchamp's late activities in New
York, along with the machinations of Picabia, re-cast Dada's history.
Dada's European chroniclers—primarily Richter, Tzara, and
Huelsenbeck—would eventually become preoccupied with establishing the
pre-eminence of Zurich and Berlin at the foundations of Dada, but it
proved to be Duchamp who was most strategically brilliant in
manipulating the genealogy of this avant-garde formation, deftly turning
New York Dada from a late-comer into an originating force.
History
Dada emerged from a period of artistic and literary movements like Futurism, Cubism and Expressionism;
centered mainly in Italy, France and Germany respectively, in those
years. However, unlike the earlier movements Dada was able to establish a
broad base of support, giving rise to a movement that was international
in scope. Its adherents were based in cities all over the world
including New York, Zürich, Berlin, Paris and others. There were
regional differences like an emphasis on literature in Zürich and
political protest in Berlin.
Prominent Dadaists published manifestos, but the movement was
loosely organized and there was no central hierarchy. On 14 July 1916,
Ball originated the seminal Dada Manifesto. Tzara wrote a second Dada manifesto, considered important Dada reading, which was published in 1918.
Tzara's manifesto articulated the concept of "Dadaist disgust"—the
contradiction implicit in avant-garde works between the criticism and
affirmation of modernist reality. In the Dadaist perspective modern art
and culture are considered a type of fetishization
where the objects of consumption (including organized systems of
thought like philosophy and morality) are chosen, much like a preference
for cake or cherries, to fill a void.
The shock and scandal the movement inflamed was deliberate;
Dadaist magazines were banned and their exhibits closed. Some of the
artists even faced imprisonment. These provocations were part of the
entertainment but, over time, audiences' expectations eventually
outpaced the movement's capacity to deliver. As the artists' well-known
"sarcastic laugh" started to come from the audience, the provocations of
Dadaists began to lose their impact. Dada was an active movement during
years of political turmoil from 1916 when European countries were
actively engaged in World War I, the conclusion of which, in 1918, set
the stage for a new political order.
Zürich
There is some disagreement about where Dada originated. The movement
is commonly accepted by most art historians and those who lived during
this period to have identified with the Cabaret Voltaire (housed inside the Holländische Meierei bar in Zürich) co-founded by poet and cabaret singer Emmy Hennings and Hugo Ball.
Some sources propose a Romanian origin, arguing that Dada was an
offshoot of a vibrant artistic tradition that transposed to Switzerland
when a group of Jewish modernist artists, including Tristan Tzara, Marcel Janco, and Arthur Segal
settled in Zürich. Before World War I, similar art had already existed
in Bucharest and other Eastern European cities; it is likely that Dada's
catalyst was the arrival in Zürich of artists like Tzara and Janco.
The name Cabaret Voltaire was a reference to the French philosopher Voltaire, whose novel Candide mocked the religious and philosophical dogmas of the day. Opening night was attended by Ball, Tzara, Jean Arp, and Janco. These artists along with others like Sophie Taeuber, Richard Huelsenbeck and Hans Richter
started putting on performances at the Cabaret Voltaire and using art
to express their disgust with the war and the interests that inspired
it.
Having left Germany and Romania during World War I,
the artists arrived in politically neutral Switzerland. They used
abstraction to fight against the social, political, and cultural ideas
of that time. They used shock art, provocation, and "vaudevilleian excess" to subvert the conventions they believed had caused the Great War.
The Dadaists believed those ideas to be a byproduct of bourgeois
society that was so apathetic it would wage war against itself rather
than challenge the status quo:
We had lost confidence in our culture. Everything had to be demolished. We would begin again after the tabula rasa.
At the Cabaret Voltaire we began by shocking common sense, public
opinion, education, institutions, museums, good taste, in short, the
whole prevailing order.
— Marcel Janco
Ball said that Janco's mask and costume designs, inspired by Romanian
folk art, made "the horror of our time, the paralyzing background of
events" visible. According to Ball, performances were accompanied by a "balalaika orchestra playing delightful folk-songs". Influenced by African music, arrhythmic drumming and jazz were common at Dada gatherings.
After the cabaret closed down, Dada activities moved on to a new gallery, and Hugo Ball
left for Bern. Tzara began a relentless campaign to spread Dada ideas.
He bombarded French and Italian artists and writers with letters, and
soon emerged as the Dada leader and master strategist. The Cabaret
Voltaire re-opened, and is still in the same place at the Spiegelgasse 1
in the Niederdorf.
Zürich Dada, with Tzara at the helm, published the art and literature review Dada beginning in July 1917, with five editions from Zürich and the final two from Paris.
Other artists, such as André Breton and Philippe Soupault, created "literature groups to help extend the influence of Dada".
After the fighting of the First World War had ended in the
armistice of November 1918, most of the Zürich Dadaists returned to
their home countries, and some began Dada activities in other cities.
Others, such as the Swiss native Sophie Taeuber, would remain in Zürich into the 1920s.
Berlin
"Berlin was a city of tightened stomachers, of mounting, thundering
hunger, where hidden rage was transformed into a boundless money lust,
and men's minds were concentrating more and more on questions of naked
existence... Fear was in everybody's bones" – Richard Hülsenbeck
Raoul Hausmann, who helped establish Dada in Berlin, published his manifestoSynthethic Cino of Painting
in 1918 where he attacked Expressionism and the art critics who
promoted it. Dada is envisioned in contrast to art forms, such as
Expressionism, that appeal to viewers' emotional states: "the
exploitation of so-called echoes of the soul". In Hausmann's conception
of Dada, new techniques of creating art would open doors to explore new
artistic impulses. Fragmented use of real world stimuli allowed an
expression of reality that was radically different from other forms of
art:
A child's discarded doll or a
brightly colored rag are more necessary expressions than those of some
ass who seeks to immortalize himself in oils in finite parlors.
— Raoul Hausmann
The groups in Germany were not as strongly anti-art as other groups. Their activity and art were more political and social, with corrosive manifestos
and propaganda, satire, public demonstrations and overt political
activities. The intensely political and war-torn environment of Berlin
had a dramatic impact on the ideas of Berlin Dadaists. Conversely, New
York's geographic distance from the war spawned its more
theoretically-driven, less political nature. According to Hans Richter,
a Dadaist who was in Berlin yet “aloof from active participation in
Berlin Dada”, several distinguishing characteristics of the Dada
movement there included: “its political element and its technical
discoveries in painting and literature”; “inexhaustible energy”; “mental
freedom which included the abolition of everything”; and “members
intoxicated with their own power in a way that had no relation to the
real world”, who would “turn their rebelliousness even against each
other”.
In February 1918, while the Great War was approaching its climax,
Huelsenbeck gave his first Dada speech in Berlin, and he produced a
Dada manifesto later in the year. Following the October Revolution in Russia, by then out of the war, Hannah Höch and George Grosz used Dada to express communist sympathies. Grosz, together with John Heartfield, Höch and Hausmann developed the technique of photomontage during this period. Johannes Baader, the uninhibited Oberdada, was the “crowbar” of the Berlin movement's direct action according to Hans Richter and is credited with creating the first giant collages, according to Raoul Hausmann.
After the war, the artists published a series of short-lived political magazines and held the First International Dada Fair, 'the greatest project yet conceived by the Berlin Dadaists', in the summer of 1920. As well as work by the main members of Berlin Dada – Grosz, Raoul Hausmann, Hannah Höch, Johannes Baader, Huelsenbeck and Heartfield – the exhibition also included the work of Otto Dix, Francis Picabia, Jean Arp, Max Ernst, Rudolf Schlichter, Johannes Baargeld and others.
In all, over 200 works were exhibited, surrounded by incendiary
slogans, some of which also ended up written on the walls of the Nazi's Entartete Kunst exhibition in 1937. Despite high ticket prices, the exhibition lost money, with only one recorded sale.
In Cologne,
Ernst, Baargeld, and Arp launched a controversial Dada exhibition in
1920 which focused on nonsense and anti-bourgeois sentiments. Cologne's
Early Spring Exhibition was set up in a pub, and required that
participants walk past urinals while being read lewd poetry by a woman
in a communion dress. The police closed the exhibition on grounds of obscenity, but it was re-opened when the charges were dropped.
Like Zürich, New York City was a refuge for writers and artists from
the First World War. Soon after arriving from France in 1915, Marcel Duchamp and Francis Picabia met American artist Man Ray. By 1916 the three of them became the center of radical anti-art activities in the United States. American Beatrice Wood, who had been studying in France, soon joined them, along with Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven. Arthur Cravan, fleeing conscription in France, was also in New York for a time. Much of their activity centered in Alfred Stieglitz's gallery, 291, and the home of Walter and Louise Arensberg.
The New Yorkers, though not particularly organized, called their activities Dada, but they did not issue manifestos. They issued challenges to art and culture through publications such as The Blind Man, Rongwrong, and New York Dada in which they criticized the traditionalist basis for museum
art. New York Dada lacked the disillusionment of European Dada and was
instead driven by a sense of irony and humor. In his book Adventures in the arts: informal chapters on painters, vaudeville and poetsMarsden Hartley included an essay on "The Importance of Being 'Dada'".
During this time Duchamp began exhibiting "readymades" (everyday objects found or purchased and declared art) such as a bottle rack, and was active in the Society of Independent Artists. In 1917 he submitted the now famous Fountain,
a urinal signed R. Mutt, to the Society of Independent Artists
exhibition but they rejected the piece. First an object of scorn within
the arts community, the Fountain has since become almost canonized by some as one of the most recognizable modernist works of sculpture. Art world experts polled by the sponsors of the 2004 Turner Prize, Gordon's gin, voted it "the most influential work of modern art".
As recent scholarship documents, the work is still controversial.
Duchamp indicated in a 1917 letter to his sister that a female friend
was centrally involved in the conception of this work: "One of my female
friends who had adopted the pseudonym Richard Mutt sent me a porcelain
urinal as a sculpture." The piece is in line with the scatological aesthetics of Duchamp's neighbour, the Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven. In an attempt to "pay homage to the spirit of Dada" a performance artist named Pierre Pinoncelli made a crack in a replica of The Fountain with a hammer in January 2006; he also urinated on it in 1993.
Picabia's travels tied New York, Zürich and Paris groups together
during the Dadaist period. For seven years he also published the Dada
periodical 391 in Barcelona, New York City, Zürich, and Paris from 1917 through 1924.
By 1921, most of the original players moved to Paris where Dada had experienced its last major incarnation.
Paris
The French avant-garde kept abreast of Dada activities in Zürich with regular communications from Tristan Tzara
(whose pseudonym means "sad in country," a name chosen to protest the
treatment of Jews in his native Romania), who exchanged letters, poems,
and magazines with Guillaume Apollinaire, André Breton, Max Jacob, Clément Pansaers, and other French writers, critics and artists.
Paris had arguably been the classical music capital of the world
since the advent of musical Impressionism in the late 19th century. One
of its practitioners, Erik Satie, collaborated with Picasso and Cocteau in a mad, scandalous ballet called Parade. First performed by the Ballets Russes in 1917, it succeeded in creating a scandal but in a different way than Stravinsky's Le Sacre du printemps
had done almost five years earlier. This was a ballet that was clearly
parodying itself, something traditional ballet patrons would obviously
have serious issues with.
Dada in Paris surged in 1920 when many of the originators
converged there. Inspired by Tzara, Paris Dada soon issued manifestos,
organized demonstrations, staged performances and produced a number of
journals (the final two editions of Dada, Le Cannibale, and Littérature featured Dada in several editions.)
The first introduction of Dada artwork to the Parisian public was at the Salon des Indépendants in 1921. Jean Crotti exhibited works associated with Dada including a work entitled, Explicatif bearing the word Tabu. In the same year Tzara staged his Dadaist play The Gas Heart
to howls of derision from the audience. When it was re-staged in 1923
in a more professional production, the play provoked a theatre riot
(initiated by André Breton) that heralded the split within the movement that was to produce Surrealism. Tzara's last attempt at a Dadaist drama was his "ironictragedy" Handkerchief of Clouds in 1924.
Netherlands
In the Netherlands the Dada movement centered mainly around Theo van Doesburg, best known for establishing the De Stijl
movement and magazine of the same name. Van Doesburg mainly focused on
poetry, and included poems from many well-known Dada writers in De Stijl such as Hugo Ball, Hans Arp and Kurt Schwitters. Van Doesburg and Thijs Rinsema [nl] (a cordwainer and artist in Drachten) became friends of Schwitters, and together they organized the so-called Dutch Dada campaign in 1923, where van Doesburg promoted a leaflet about Dada (entitled What is Dada?), Schwitters read his poems, Vilmos Huszár demonstrated a mechanical dancing doll and Nelly van Doesburg (Theo's wife), played avant-garde compositions on piano.
Van Doesburg wrote Dada poetry himself in De Stijl, although
under a pseudonym, I.K. Bonset, which was only revealed after his death
in 1931. 'Together' with I.K. Bonset, he also published a short-lived Dutch Dada magazine called Mécano (1922–23). Another Dutchman identified by K. Schippers in his study of the movement in the Netherlands was the Groningen typographer H. N. Werkman, who was in touch with van Doesburg and Schwitters while editing his own magazine, The Next Call
(1923–6). Two more artists mentioned by Schippers were German-born and
eventually settled in the Netherlands. These were Otto van Rees, who had
taken part in the liminal exhibitions at the Café Voltaire in Zürich,
and Paul Citroen.
Georgia
Though Dada itself was unknown in Georgia
until at least 1920, from 1917 until 1921 a group of poets called
themselves Le Degré 41", or "Le Degré Quarante et Un" (English, "The
41st Degree") (referring both to the latitude of Tbilisi,
Georgia and to the Celsius temperature of a high fever [equal to 105.8
Fahrenheit]) organized along Dadaist lines. The most important figure in
this group was Iliazd (Ilia Zdanevich), whose radical typographical designs visually echo the publications of the Dadaists.
After his flight to Paris in 1921, he collaborated with Dadaists on publications and events. For example, when Tristan Tzara was banned from holding seminars in Théâtre Michel in 1923, Iliazd booked the venue on his behalf for the performance, "The Bearded Heart Soirée", and designed the flyer.
Yugoslavia
In Yugoslavia, alongside the new art movement Zenitism, there was significant Dada activity between 1920 and 1922, run mainly by Dragan Aleksić and including work by Mihailo S. Petrov, Ljubomir Micić and Branko Ve Poljanski. Aleksić used the term "Yougo-Dada" and is known to have been in contact with Raoul Hausmann, Kurt Schwitters, and Tristan Tzara.
Italy
The Dada movement in Italy, based in Mantua,
was met with distaste and failed to make a significant impact in the
world of art. It published a magazine for a short time and held an
exhibition in Rome, featuring paintings, quotations from Tristan Tzara,
and original epigrams such as "True Dada is against Dada". One member of
this group was Julius Evola, who went on to become an eminent scholar of occultism, as well as a right-wing philosopher.
In Tsuburaya Productions's Ultra Series, an alien named Dada was inspired by the Dadaism movement, with said character first appearing in episode 28 of the 1966 tokusatsu series, Ultraman, its design by character artist Toru Narita.
Dada's design is primarily monochromatic, and features numerous sharp
lines and alternating black and white stripes, in reference to the
movement and, in particular, to chessboard and Go
patterns. On May 19, 2016, in celebration to the 100 year anniversary
of Dadaism in Tokyo, the Ultra Monster was invited to meet the Swiss
Ambassador Urs Bucher.
Butoh,
the Japanese dance-form originating in 1959, can be considered to have
direct connections to the spirit of the Dada movement, as Tatsumi Hijikata, one of Butoh's founders, "was influenced early in his career by Dadaism".
Russia
Dada in itself was relatively unknown in Russia, however, avant-garde art was widespread due to the Bolsheviks' revolutionary agenda. The Nichevoki [ru], a literary group sharing Dadaist ideals achieved infamy after one of its members suggested that Vladimir Mayakovsky should go to the "Pampushka" (Pameatnik Pushkina – Pushkin monument) on the "Tverbul" (Tverskoy Boulevard) to clean the shoes of anyone who desired it, after Mayakovsky declared that he was going to cleanse Russian literature. For more information on Dadaism's influence upon Russian avant-garde art, see the book Russian Dada 1914–1924.
Women of Dada
Often
overlooked when discussing the history and foundations of Dada, it is
necessary to shed light on the female artists who created and inspired
art and artists alike. These women were often times in platonic or
romantic relationships with the male Dadaists mentioned above but are
rarely written past the relative ties. However, each artist made vital
contributions to the movement. Other notable mentions that do not
include the artists below are: Suzanne Duchamp, Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven, Emmy Hennings, Beatrice Wood, Clara Tice, and Ella Bergmann-Michel.
Hannah Höch
Hannah Höch of Berlin is considered to be the only female Dadaist in Berlin at the time of the movement. During this time, she was in a relationship with Raoul Hausmann who also was a Dada artist. She channeled the same anti-war and anti-government (Weimar Republic)
in her works but brought out a feminist lens on the themes. With her
works primarily of collage and photomontage, she often used precise
placement or detailed titles to callout the misogynistic ways she and
other women were treated.
Sophie Taeuber-Arp
Sophie Taeuber-Arp was a Swiss artist, teacher, and dancer who produced various types of fine art and handicraft pieces. While married to Dadaist Jean Arp, Taeuber-Arp was known in the Dada community for her performative dancing. As such, she worked with choreographer Rudolf von Laban and was written by Tristan Tarza for her dancing skills.
Mina Loy
London-born
Mina Loy was known for being active in the literary sector of the New
York Dada scene. She spent time writing poetry, creating Dada magazines,
and acting and writing in plays. She contributed writing to Dada
journal The Blind Man and Marchel Duchamp's Rongwrong.
Poetry
Dadists used shock, nihilism, negativity, paradox, randomness, subconscious forces and antinomianism
to subvert established traditions in the aftermath of the Great War.
Tzara's 1920 manifesto proposed cutting words from a newspaper and
randomly selecting fragments to write poetry, a process in which the
synchronous universe itself becomes an active agent in creating the art.
A poem written using this technique would be a "fruit" of the words
that were clipped from the article.
In literary arts Dadaists focused on poetry, particularly the so-called sound poetry invented by Hugo Ball.
Dadaist poems attacked traditional conceptions of poetry, including
structure, order, as well as the interplay of sound and the meaning of
language. For Dadaists, the existing system by which information is
articulated robs language of its dignity. The dismantling of language
and poetic conventions are Dadaist attempts to restore language to its
purest and most innocent form: "With these sound poem, we wanted to
dispense with a language which journalism had made desolate and
impossible."
Simultaneous poems (or poèmes simultanés) were recited by a
group of speakers who, collectively, produced a chaotic and confusing
set of voices. These poems are considered manifestations of modernity
including advertising, technology, and conflict. Unlike movements such
as Expressionism, Dadaism did not take a negative view of modernity and
the urban life. The chaotic urban and futuristic world is considered
natural terrain that opens up new ideas for life and art.
Music
Dada was
not confined to the visual and literary arts; its influence reached into
sound and music. These movements exerted a pervasive influence on
20th-century music, especially on mid-century avant-garde composers
based in New York—among them Edgard Varèse, Stefan Wolpe, John Cage, and
Morton Feldman. Kurt Schwitters developed what he called sound poems, while Francis Picabia and Georges Ribemont-Dessaignes composed Dada music performed at the Festival Dada in Paris on 26 May 1920. Other composers such as Erwin Schulhoff, Hans Heusser and Alberto Savinio all wrote Dada music, while members of Les Six collaborated with members of the Dada movement and had their works performed at Dada gatherings. Erik Satie also dabbled with Dadaist ideas during his career.
Legacy
While broadly based, the movement was unstable. By 1924 in Paris,
Dada was melding into Surrealism, and artists had gone on to other ideas
and movements, including Surrealism, social realism and other forms of modernism. Some theorists argue that Dada was actually the beginning of postmodern art.
By the dawn of the Second World War, many of the European Dadaists had emigrated to the United States. Some (Otto Freundlich, Walter Serner) died in death camps under Adolf Hitler, who actively persecuted the kind of "degenerate art"
that he considered Dada to represent. The movement became less active
as post-war optimism led to the development of new movements in art and
literature.
At the same time that the Zürich Dadaists were making noise and spectacle at the Cabaret Voltaire, Lenin was planning his revolutionary plans for Russia in a nearby apartment. Tom Stoppard used this coincidence as a premise for his play Travesties (1974), which includes Tzara, Lenin, and James Joyce as characters. French writer Dominique Noguez imagined Lenin as a member of the Dada group in his tongue-in-cheek Lénine Dada (1989).
The former building of the Cabaret Voltaire fell into disrepair
until it was occupied from January to March 2002, by a group proclaiming
themselves Neo-Dadaists, led by Mark Divo. The group included Jan Thieler, Ingo Giezendanner, Aiana Calugar, Lennie Lee,
and Dan Jones. After their eviction, the space was turned into a museum
dedicated to the history of Dada. The work of Lee and Jones remained on
the walls of the new museum.
Several notable retrospectives have examined the influence of Dada upon art and society. In 1967, a large Dada retrospective was held in Paris. In 2006, the Museum of Modern Art in New York City mounted a Dada exhibition in partnership with the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., and the Centre Pompidou in Paris. The LTM
label has released a large number of Dada-related sound recordings,
including interviews with artists such as Tzara, Picabia, Schwitters,
Arp, and Huelsenbeck, and musical repertoire including Satie,
Ribemont-Dessaignes, Picabia, and Nelly van Doesburg.
Musician Frank Zappa was a self-proclaimed Dadaist after learning of the movement:
In
the early days, I didn't even know what to call the stuff my life was
made of. You can imagine my delight when I discovered that someone in a
distant land had the same idea—AND a nice, short name for it.
David
Bowie adapted William S. Burrough's cut-up technique for writing lyrics
and Kurt Cobain also admittedly used this method for many of his
Nirvana lyrics, including "In Bloom".
Art techniques developed
Dadaism also blurred the line between literary and visual arts:
Dada is the groundwork to abstract art and sound poetry, a starting point for performance art, a prelude to postmodernism, an influence on pop art,
a celebration of antiart to be later embraced for anarcho-political
uses in the 1960s and the movement that laid the foundation for Surrealism.
Collage
The
Dadaists imitated the techniques developed during the cubist movement
through the pasting of cut pieces of paper items, but extended their art
to encompass items such as transportation tickets, maps, plastic
wrappers, etc. to portray aspects of life, rather than representing
objects viewed as still life. They also invented the “chance collage"
technique, involving dropping torn scraps of paper onto a larger sheet
and then pasting the pieces wherever they landed.
Cut-up technique
Cut-up technique is an extension of collage to words themselves, Tristan Tzara describes this in the Dada Manifesto:
TO MAKE A DADAIST POEM
Take a newspaper.
Take some scissors.
Choose from this paper an article of the length you want to make your poem.
Cut out the article.
Next carefully cut out each of the words that makes up this article and put them all in a bag.
Shake gently.
Next take out each cutting one after the other.
Copy conscientiously in the order in which they left the bag.
The poem will resemble you.
And there you are – an infinitely original author of charming sensibility, even though unappreciated by the vulgar herd.
Photomontage
The Dadaists – the "monteurs" (mechanics) – used scissors and glue
rather than paintbrushes and paints to express their views of modern
life through images presented by the media. A variation on the collage
technique, photomontage utilized actual or reproductions of real
photographs printed in the press. In Cologne, Max Ernst used images from the First World War to illustrate messages of the destruction of war.
Although the Berlin photomontages were assembled, like engines, the
(non)relationships among the disparate elements were more rhetorical
than real.
Assemblage
The assemblages
were three-dimensional variations of the collage – the assembly of
everyday objects to produce meaningful or meaningless (relative to the
war) pieces of work including war objects and trash. Objects were
nailed, screwed or fastened together in different fashions. Assemblages
could be seen in the round or could be hung on a wall.
Readymades
Marcel Duchamp began to view the manufactured objects of his collection as objects of art, which he called "readymades".
He would add signatures and titles to some, converting them into
artwork that he called "readymade aided" or "rectified readymades".
Duchamp wrote: "One important characteristic was the short sentence
which I occasionally inscribed on the 'readymade.' That sentence,
instead of describing the object like a title, was meant to carry the
mind of the spectator towards other regions more verbal. Sometimes I
would add a graphic detail of presentation which in order to satisfy my
craving for alliterations, would be called 'readymade aided.'" One such example of Duchamp's readymade works is the urinal that was turned onto its back, signed "R. Mutt", titled Fountain, and submitted to the Society of Independent Artists exhibition that year, though it was not displayed.
Many young artists in America embraced the theories and ideas
espoused by Duchamp. Robert Rauschenberg in particular was very
influenced by Dadaism and tended to use found objects in his collages as
a means of dissolving the boundary between high and low culture.