Neo-Dada is a label applied primarily to audio and visual art that has similarities in method or intent to earlier Dada artwork. It is the foundation of Fluxus, Pop Art and Nouveau réalisme.
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.
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.
Neo-Dada (1950s): all media. Neo-Dada refers to art work created during the 1950s resembling the original Dada movement in its methods.
Neo-Dadaism Organizers. Group of Japanese artists who showed at the Yomiuri Independent exhibitions of the late 1950s and developed ‘anti-art' activities modelled on those of the DADA movement.
Neo-Dada (1950s): Reaction Against Abstract Expressionism During the mid/late 1950s, an anti-aesthetic style of art known as Neo-Dada - exemplified by Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008) & ...
Yves Klein was a French Neo-Dadaist artist who produced a series of monochrome works in 1957. He is credited with creating an entirely new color of blue, eventually called International Klein Blue.
There was a resurgence after the war and into the 1950s of the figurative, as Neo-Dada, Fluxus, Conceptual Art, Neo-expressionism, Installation art, Performance Art, Video Art and Pop art have come to signify the age of consumerism.
The Cabaret Voltaire fell into disrepair until it was occupied by a group claiming to be neo-dadaists in June-August of 2002. After their eviction the Cabaret Voltaire became a museum dedicated to the history of Dada and the Dada movement. ...
Cabaret Voltaire fell into desrepair after World War II but in 2002 a group of artists claiming to be 'neo-Dadaists' led by Mark Divo began to occupy Cabaret Voltaire.
Robert Rauschenberg also used 'found images' in his art but, unlike Johns' images, they are combined in a relationship with one another or with real objects. The work of both these artists is often referred to as Neo-Dada as it draws on ‘ ...
8 Color Field painting, Bay Area Figurative Movement, Neo-Dada 4.9 Geometric abstraction, Op Art, Minimalism, Color field 4.10 Shaped canvas, Washington Color School, Abstract Illusionism, Lyrical Abstraction 4.11 Neo-expressionism ...
the leading Dadaists were Marcel Duchamp (whose Mona Lisa adorned with moustache and goatee is a Dada classic), George Grosz, Otto Dix, Hans Richter and Jean Arp. The movement had a strong influence on Pop Art, which was sometimes called neo-Dada.
See also: Dada, Movement, Pop art, Realism, Aesthetic
 
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