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Dada

Fine arts Czech cubismDadaism

Dada Movement
The Dada art movement reigned from about 1916 to 1920 mainly in the countries of France, Germany and Switzerland.

 


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Dada ( /ˈd'ːd'ː/) or Dadaism is a cultural movement that began in Zurich, Switzerland, during World War I and peaked from 1916 to 1922.[1] "Dada was born out of negative reaction to the horrors of World War I.

DADA
KEY DATES: 1916-1920s
An international movement among European artists and writers between 1915 and 1922, characterised by a spirit of anarchic revolt.

DaDa in Germany took on a stronger political edge. Especially in the work of George Grosz and Hannah Hoch and their attacks on the Wiemer Republic.

Dada - The Anti-War Art Movement
The Art History Archive - Art Movements
Hannah Hoch - Cut with the Kitchen Knife Through the First Epoch of the Weimar Beer-Belly Culture, 1919.

Dada was a protest by a group of European artists against World War I, bourgeois society, and the conservativism of traditional thought.

Dada
"Dada is beautiful like the night, who cradles the young day in her arms." - Hans Arp ...

The artists of the Dada movement had become disillusioned by art, art history and history in general.

Dada and Surrealism
The Dada Surrealist Movement is now part of art history more in spite of, than because of, its initial aims.

Dada (French: "hobby-horse"), nihilistic movement in the arts that flourished primarily in Zrich, New York City, Berlin, Cologne, Paris, and Hannover, Ger. in the early 20th century.

Dada or Dadaism is a cultural movement that began in neutral Zrich, Switzerland, during World War I and peaked from 1916 to 1920.

Dada
"Dada" was apparently chosen randomly for this art movement. During a meeting of young artists and war resisters in 1916 in Zurich, Switzerland, they stuck a paper knife into a French-German dictionary and selected the word it pointed to.

Dada
An early twentieth century art movement which ridiculed contemporary culture and traditional art forms. The movement was formed to prove the bankruptcy of existing style of artistic expression rather than to promote a particular style itself.

Dada
- An early twentieth century art movement that critically questioned even ridiculed contemporary culture and traditional art forms.

Dada
An international movement in the fine arts, drama, and literature that took shape in Zurich in 1916, with other major centers in New York (New York Dada, 1915-1920), Germany (1918-1923), and Paris (1919-1922).

Dada
A movement in art and literature founded in Switzerland in the early 20th century that ridiculed contemporary culture and conventional art with an antimilitaristic and anti-aesthetic attitude influenced by the horrors of World War I.

Dada
international "anti-art" movement originating in Zurich c.1916, involving Marcel Duchamp, Jean Arp, Francis Picabia, among others; a forerunner of SURREALISM; hence Dadaism, Dadaist.
Danube School ...

Dada Movement - Marcel Duchamp - 'Fountain' 1917
The idea of readymades such as Fountain were that it did not matter whether or not an article was made by an artist, ...

Dada. (1) A movement begun by Marcel Duchamp at 18 months old. Incorporating anything into the work except art, it served as a major influence on public toilets and Surrealism. (2) The opposite of feminism. See Mama.

Dada.
The name was chosen randomly by a group of rebellious young artists from all over Europe sheltering in Zurich during the First World War.

Dada
Influential international intellectual movement, which was founded in Zurich in 1916 by a group of artists and writers. The Dadaists rejected and ridiculed the values, ideas and culture of society.

Dada An art movement that originated during World War I in a number of world capitals, including New York, Paris, Berlin, and Zurich, ...

DADA
A movement that emerged during World War I in Europe that purported to be anti-everything, even anti-art. Dada poked fun at all the established traditions and tastes in art with works that were deliberately shocking, vulgar, and nonsensical.

DADA - An early twentieth century art movement which emerged during the First World War. Rather than supporting a specific art style of its own Dada ridiculed traditional art forms and contemporary culture.

DADA -
DECKLE EDGE - Feathery edge of a sheet of handmade paper, caused by the deckle or frame which confines the pulp to the mold. Also present on some machine-made papers, caused by the rubber deckle straps at the sides of the paper machine.

Dada (1916-1924): all media. This term refers to the cultural movement that began in Switzerland during World War I.

Dada
1916-1922
Hans Arp, Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst, George Grosz, Hugo Ball, Man Ray, Francis Picabia, Raoul Hausmann, John Heartfield, Marcel Janco, Kurt Schwitters, Sophie Taeuber-Arp ...

Dada and Surrealism
Francis Picabia 1916, Dada Image File history File links Size of this preview: 389 Ã ...

neo-Dada - See Pop Art.
Neo-Expressionism - Broadly used, this may refer to all expressionist art since the original movement known as Expressionism arose in Germany between 1905 and 1925.

Dada. Artistic movement started in Zurich in 1916 by a group, mostly painters and poets, who went to Switzerland to take refuge from World War I and who gathered at the *Cabaret Voltaire, a 'literary nightclub' organized by *Ball.

Dada began as an anti-art movement, in the sense that it rejected the way art was appreciated and defined in contemporary art scenes. Founded in Zurich, Switzerland, the movement was a response to World War I.

Dada probably began in the Cabaret Voltaire in Zurich in 1916 (by some accounts on October 6), and there were active dadaists in New York such as Marcel Duchamp and the Liberian art student, Beatrice Wood, ...

Dada Art Movement
Dada is not an art style, but an antimilitaristic and antiaesthetic attitude.
The movement (in both art and literature) came out of the period just after World War I, starting in Zurich.

Dada - (hobby horse)
Dadaism was a movement of poets, and artists who revolted against traditional painting and sculpture. Politically they protested the senseless waste of World War I and the turbulent disorder left in its wake.

Dada...A nihilistic, anti-art, anti-everything art movement resulting from the social, political, and psychological dislocations of World War I.

Dada was an artistic and literary movement that emerged in 1916. It arose in reaction to World War I, and the nationalism and rationalism which many thought had led to the war.

Neo-Dada is a label applied primarily to the visual arts describing artwork that has similarities in method or intent to earlier Dada artwork. Neo-Dada is exemplified by its use of modern materials, popular imagery, and absurdist contrast.

Dada - art which questions the benefits of technology, characterized by the exploitation of accidental and incongruous effects, and by deliberate irrationality, nihilism and negation of traditional artistic values ...

Max Ernst was one of the founding members of surrealism, who had previously been linked to the dada movement.

The hard-edged commercial style of Lichtenstein's comic book paintings was an antidote to the incoherent splashes of late Abstract Expressionism, but it was not simply intended as an act of Pop/Dada protest, ...

With the roots of Surrealism commonly linked to both Dada and Cubism, it is also said to have been influenced by the Abstraction of Wassily Kandinsky, Expressionism, Post-Impressionism and the older "bloodlines" of Hieronymus Bosch.

Dada: French for 'hobby horse'. Slavic for 'yes yes' said to have been chosen from a dictionary at random with a penknife to describe a movement of refugee artists and writers who found themselves in Zurich in 1916 at the height of the carnage of the ...

Ready Mades - Ready Mades are associated with the Dada movement and can be manufactured objects or found objects ...more info ...

automatic (writing) - Automatic writing was a technique first used by the Dada and Surrealist artists in the early 20th century, ...

By the early 1940s the main movements in modern art, expressionism, cubism, abstraction, surrealism, and dada were represented in New York: Marcel Duchamp, Fernand Lger, Piet Mondrian, Jacques Lipchitz, Max Ernst, Andr Breton, ...

Anti-Art - Art, either Dada or in its tradition, which rejects conventional theories and forms-- techniques, materials, and means of display. Marcel Duchamp (French-American, 1887-1968) is credited with introducing the term c.

A movement in literature and the visual arts that developed in the mid1920s and remained strong until the mid1940s, growing out of Dada and automatism.

Mounting his image in a window, Cole literally reframes history in a way that summons the ready-made art of surrealist and Dada artists such as May Ray and Marcel Duchamp.

Do I Have to Like Everything? Art History 101: Dada Diebenkorn in New Mexico
"D" Artists
Charles Demuth Duccio (di Buoninsegna) Robert Scott Duncanson ...

Dada (Jean Arp, Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst, Francis Picabia, Kurt Schwitters)
Surrealism (Jean Arp, Salvador Dali, Max Ernst, Rene Magritte, Joan Miro)
Constructivism (Naum Gabo, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy) ...

While it has its roots in the European Dada movement of the early 20th century conceptual art emerged as a recognized art movement in the 1960s.

Dating from the 1960's, Conceptual Art has its roots in the early 20th century European arts movement called Dada as well as in the writings on language and meaning by mid-century philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein.

Reflecting this artistic diversity, Modernism can be considered as a larger heading under which a number of different art movements such as Impressionism, Fauvism, Expressionism, Cubism, Dada, Surrealism, ...

See also: Movement, Painting, Realism, Expression, Sculpture

Fine arts Czech cubismDadaism

 
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