Etikettarkiv: Hans Arp

Dada 100 år – 6 bra böcker + intervju med Adrian Notz

”Bevor Dada da War, war Dada da”
— Hans Arp

Den 5 februari 1916 grundades dadaismen på Cabaret Voltaire, Spiegelgasse 1, i Zürich. Därifrån spred den sig över stora delar av världen – till Berlin, Hannover, Köln, Paris, Barcelona, New York – och kom att påverka konstvärden i grunden.

Det är i år 100 år sedan dadaismen grundades och det har firats världen över med stora utställningar, inte minst i den tyskspråkiga världen. Det har också getts ut en hel del böcker och utställningskataloger om dadaismen. Det här är några tips.

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Genesis Dada. 100 Years of Dada Zurich
Red. Arp Museum Bahnhof Rolandseck i
samarbete med Cabaret Voltaire
Scheidegger & Spiess

Genesis Dada fokuserar på dadaismens rötter och födelse. Genuint underhållande tematiska essäer; de flesta är relativt lättlästa, men ett par av dem är riktigt snåriga. Trots det är det här en bok som borde funka för dem som söker en introduktion till dadaismen.

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Dadaglobe Reconstructed
Medverkande: Adrian Sudhalter,
Michel Sanouillet, Cathérine Hug,
Samantha Friedman, Lee Ann Daffner
& Karl D. Buchberg
Scheidegger & Spiess

Dadaglobe Reconstructed handlar särskilt om Tristan Tzaras alldrig fullbordade antologi-projekt Dadaglobe. En fantastisk bok i vilken forskare och konstkännare berättar om försöket att rekonstruera Dadaglobe. Andra halvan av boken utgörs av den rekonstruerade antologin.

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Dada Africa. Dialogue with the Other
Red. Ralf Burmeister, Michaela Oberhofer,
och Esther Tisa Francini
Scheidegger & Spiess

”Utställningskatalogen Dada Africa är en rejäl pjäs, rikligt illustrerad och med ett tjugotal mycket välskrivna essäer indelade i fyra tematiska block: Dada Performance, Dada Gallery, Dada Revolt och Dada Magic.” För dem som är särskilt intresserade av dadaisternas (betydande) intresse för icke-västerländska kulturer, med särskild tonvikt på Afrika.

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David Hopkins
Dada and Surrealism. A Very Short Introduction
Oxford University Press

Dada and Surrealism är en kort, bitvis knastertorr och underhållande introduktion till två av modernismens mest kända ismer. Mycket termer och begrepp.

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Dietmar Elger
Dadaism
Red. Uta Grosenick
TASCHEN

Dadaism bygger till stora delar på analyser av enskilda konstverk. En hel del bilder. Opretentiös och jämförelsevis lättillgänglig.

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Marcel Duchamp, Henri-Pierre Roché och Beatrice Wood
3 New York Dadas and The Blind Man
Introduktion: Dawn Ades
Övers. Chris Allen
Atlas Press

Det här består 3 New York Dadas and The Blind Man av: Först ett drygt 20 sidor långt och oerhört initierat förord av dadakännaren Dawn Ades. Sedan Henri-Pierre Rochés ofullbordade roman Victor, ett sjuttiotal sidor. Och sedan två faksimilnummer av legendariska tidskriften The Blind Man, som Marcel Duchamp, Henri-Pierre Roché och Beatrice Wood både skapar och medverkar i. Och så sist men inte minst, utdrag ur Beatrice Woods självbiografiska I Shock Myself3 New York Dadas and The Blind Man kanske främst riktar sig till dem som har ett specialintresse för New York dada.

Läs gärna vår intervju med Adrian Notz, chef på Cabaret Voltaire i Zürich. Idag fungerar institutionen ungefär som ett kulturhus. Under jubileumsåret 2016 har man haft ovanligt mycket att göra.

Ola Wihlke

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Under Artiklar, Listor

Interview: Adrian Notz, director of Cabaret Voltaire, on Dada

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Adrian Notz, Director of Cabaret Voltaire in Zürich © Cabaret Voltaire

 
There are layers and layers of myth surrounding the dadaist movement, it might even be better to describe the founders of Dada as a network of like minded iconoclasts, that later spread the Dada attitude and philosophy to several other places, where they morphed in to new dadaisms. Dada, and its anti-art and anti-establishment attitude, spread to Berlin, Hannover, Cologne, Paris, Barcelona, even Japan, and, not least important, New York.

But the birthplace of Dada was Cabaret Voltaire on Spiegelgasse 1, in Zürich, where a lot of people from the whole of Europe had searched refuge from the Great War. The original founders of  Dada were Hugo Ball (1886–1927), Emmy Hennings (1885–1948), Hans Arp (1887–1966), Tristan Tzara (1896–1963) och Marcel Janco (1895–1984). Among the first persons to join the founding five were Richard Huelsenbeck (1892–1974) and Sophie Taeuber (1889–1943).

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Cabaret Volaire, Spiegelgasse 1, Zürich © Cabaret Voltaire

 
The five founders were held their first legendary soaré at Cabaret Voltaire 5th of February 1916. Dada is 100 years old and the centennial is celebrated all over the world. Many large institutions have Dada exhibitions on display. Several great books have been published on the subject. A lot of the attention is focused on the birthplace, Cabaret Voltaire. We had the opportunity to ask Adrian Notz a few questions, the director of Cabaret Voltaire.

When Dada is described, it’s always an emphasis on seeing the movement as a protest against the Great War. Dada is also described as an anti-movement and its orientation as rather destructive. But beyond that, what is the essence of the historical Dadaism?

The essence of the historical movement is that they found the word ”dada” to describe a zeitgeist and propose and attitude. Dada was not directly against the Great War, it was much more against a way of thinking, a definition of world that lead to this world war. Dada was against the prevailing economic fatalism, that gave all people a certain role and character. Dada tried to free mankind and looked for a league of people who would orgiastically oppose to everything useful and necessary.

Could you tell us a little bit about your background? How and why did you become especially interested in Dada and what did you do before you began working at Cabaret Voltaire?

Before I worked at Cabaret Voltaire I studied theory of art and design at the University of Arts in Zürich. I became especially interested in Dada when I began working at Cabaret Voltaire. Learning by doing, so to say. That was in 2004, twelve years ago.

Dada was born 100 years ago at Cabaret Voltaire, so it must be a really special year for Cabaret Voltaire and Zürich, you have probably prepared yourselves years in advance for the centennial, but could you first describe what’s going on at Cabaret Voltaire a regular year? Please describe the place, it’s atmosphere, activities and visitors.

Since the beginning in 2004 there has never been something like a regular year in Cabaret Voltaire. We were constantly fighting to survive, always working close to the abyss, becoming masters of the panic zone. In this sense we have been practicing the jubilee since 12 years, we managed to explore our obsessions and use them as a energy to keep working with noble gesture and delicate propriety until craziness, until unconsciousness.

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I guess, if you come to Cabaret Voltaire, it looks like a bar, where people get drunk in the nights, then it is also an event space, with a lot of different events and happenings, so we have a very mixed audience, from all parts of the city and of the world. This is quite untypical for Zürich, because there a lot of people prefer to move in certain milieus and scenes. Of course we also have a lot of weirdos coming, Dada fans, a lot of different artists with very different approaches. Everyday is different.

And there are also ordinary tourists coming to Cabaret Voltaire like pilgrims. And journalists, who ask all the same questions about what Dada is, how it was in 1916, what the space looked like, etc etc. We have a very small budget, i.e. non for communication, but even, if we would do nothing, we could not just sit here because the place itself is an attraction. Doing nothing then, is still a lot of work. We also have a shop and an exhibition space. It is a very small place, and therefor very dense with different ideas and atmospheres. Maybe the only genuinely metropolitan place in Zürich.

And what is going on at Cabaret Voltaire during the centennial? I know there are several exhibitions in Zürich and I suppose that you are involved in several projects, maybe internationally as well.

During the centennial Cabaret Voltaire is the eye of the storm. Everybody who wants to have the true Dada 100 experience goes through here. With our program we have also been the backbone or spine of the celebrations. We have held an event every night and we are still holding an event every 06:30, a celebration of each and every one of the 165 dadaists. We are only involved in a few selected projects. Like the exhibition ”Kurt Schwitters: Merz” with an architecture design by late Zaha Hadid at Galerie Gmurzynska, the place today in Zürich where Galerie Dada was in 1916.

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Or the exhibition ”Genesis Dada” in the Arp Museum Bahnhof Rolandseck where we show the first exhibitions of the Dadaist, the artoworks that were shown in Cabaret Voltaire and in Galerie Dada. We explain the genesis of Dada. In the second half of the year we are invited to several lectures and festivals in Serbia, Romania, Brazil, Spain, Italy, San Francisco and New Zealand. So this will be very different from what we have done before. Right now Manifesta 11 is using Cabaret Voltaire as their ”Guild House Voltaire” with weekly performance nights. After Manifesta we will start changing Cabaret Voltaire into a work of total art.

I’m by no means an expert on contemporary art, but my impression is that the art world since long has absorbed Dadaism, that it is now part of the DNA of art. How do you perceive the legacy of Dadaism?

Not of the whole contemporary art world. Some artists are not so aware of what they are doing or are pretending to be artists, so they can sell well. I see the legacy of Dada in those artists, who also refer to it and use Dada as a reference point. One can make like a bridge with the art of the 60s and 70s, Happening, Fluxus and even conceptual art, that relates to Dada. Today a couple of the most successful artists refer to Dada, such as Paul Mc Carthy, Marina Abramovic, Damien Hirst, Thomas Hirschhorn, Erwin Wurm and Jonathan Meese.

If you were allowed to choose three Dadaist works of art, to hang or display at your home, which ones would you choose and why?

I guess it would be one of Francis Picabias machine drawings, maybe even just the cover of one of the issues of Picabias 391 magazine. They are great!

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Hugo Ball at Cabaret Voltaire in costume by Marcel Janco © Cabaret Voltaire

 
You have written several texts about Dadaism, among them 165 Dadaistinnen. Could you mention a few dadaistinnen that you think are particularly interesting and why?

I find Sophie Teauber Arp, Emmy Hennings, Hannah Höch and Dada Baroness to be the most interesting artists amongst the Dada women. Sophie Taeuber has a great body of work and work in a lot of different disciplines. Emmy Hennings was the star of Cabaret Voltaire, she managed to keep the audience under control. And she was the one that made the Dadaists aware of that they should take one or two pictures of themselves, like Hugo Ball in the Cubist costume. Hannah Höch made fantastic and super critical collages, and Dada Baroness said: ”I am art.”

And finally, are there any books or exhibition catalogs on Dada that you would like recommend?

I would recommend Dadaglobe reconstructed, Genesis Dada, She Dada and an almost classic: Lipstick Traces by Greil Marcus.

Note to reader: In the above mentioned book by music critic Greil Marcus, he establishes links between Dada and punk.

Ola Wihlke

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Dada 100 år: Tristan Tzaras outgivna antologi ”Dadaglobe” rekonstruerad

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Dadaglobe Reconstructed
Medverkande: Adrian Sudhalter,
Michel Sanouillet, Cathérine Hug,
Samantha Friedman, Lee Ann Daffner
& Karl D. Buchberg
Scheidegger & Spiess

Det är 100 år sedan den omvälvande och svårdefinierade dadaismen grundades i Zürich. Och staden satsar hårt på dadajubileumet. Från 5:e februari till 1:a maj visar Kunsthaus Zürich utställningen ”Dadaglobe Reconstructed”. Sedan drar den, passande nog, vidare till MoMA i New York, där dadaismen hade ett av sina fästen. Andra städer där dadaismen var livaktig var Berlin, Genève och Madrid.

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Unknown photographer, Portrait of I.K. Bonset [Theo van Doesburg]: Je suis contre tout et tous, 1921. Gelatin silver print on postcard stock with ink additions, 13.8 × 8.6 cm. Private collection

 
Den rumänske poeten Tristan Tzara (1896-1963) är ungefär det närmaste en ledare för dadaismen man kan komma. Tzara, som då bodde i Paris, korresponderade med dadaister världen över i början av 20-talet och bad dem skicka allt möjligt material, som han hade tänkt samla till en mäktig volym, med den anspråksfulla titeln Dadaglobe, den definitiva gränsöverskridande dadaantologin:

”Tzara’s voluminous correspondence had ballooned in late 1920-early 1921, when letter after letter from poets and artists all over the world referred to a ‘Dadaglobe.’ From Madrid, for exanple Guillermo Torre wrote: ‘You asked me for an article for DADAGLOBE on ‘Dada in Spain’ and it is with pleasure that I write it especially for you.’ From New York, Man Ray wrote: ‘I am sending you whatever material I have been able to get for your ‘Dadaglobe.” At Paris, Paul Éluard noted: ‘I am very happy about this Dadaglobe. […] Write to me. Give me details […]”

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Johannes Baargeld, Typische Vertikalklitterung als Darstellung des Dada Baargeld, 1920. Photomontage with silver gelatin prints and halftone print with retouching on light cardboard, 37 × 27.5 cm. Kunsthaus Zürich, Grafische Sammlung (Z. Inv. 1980/25)

 
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Johannes Baargeld, Venus beim Spiel der Könige, 1920. Collage with halftone prints, engraving, ink, pencil, and gouache on light cardboard, 37 × 27.5 cm. Kunsthaus Zürich, Grafische Sammlung (Z. Inv. 1985/62)

 
Men det hela rann ut i sanden. Det saknades pengar, kanske även den organisation som krävdes. I ett Frankrike som knappt hade hämtat sig från första världskriget var det dessutom politiskt laddat att publicera böcker som samlade texter på olika språk, inte minst fiendens språk. Från dadaisternas synvinkel var det just det som var poängen, att sätta samman en någotsånär global antologi.

Ett tag misstänkte litteraturforskarna att Dadaglobe var ett av dadaisterns alla skämt, men Tzara hade menat allvar och i hans kvarlåtenskap återfanns mycket av det material som var tänkt att utgöra Dadaglobe. Det har gjorts försök tidigare att rekonstruera antologin, det främsta av Michel Sanouillet (1924-2015), redan på 60-talet. Då var det flera personer som lämnat dadaismen och blivit surrealister, exempelvis Louis Aragon, André Breton och Paul Éluard, som inte var så förtjusta i att deras dadaism lyftes fram till allmän beskådan. Men nu har man, i den mån det varit möjligt, alltså lyckats rekonstruera Dadaglobe.

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Unknown photographer, Photograph of Portrait of Walter Serner, c. 1920. Gelatin silver print, 6 × 9 cm. Private collection, Paris

 
Kunsthaus Zürich visar som sagt det man lyckats samla ihop på ”Dadaglobe Reconstructed” som sedan flyttar till New York. MoMA har förövrigt mycket dadaistisk konst i samlingarna. Utställningen visar 200 texter och konstverk som 40 konstnärer skickade till Tristan Tzara. Kunsthaus Zürich har i samarbete med det schweiziska kvalitetsförlaget Scheidegger & Speiss gett ut en underbar bok, vars titel i likhet med utställningens titel mer eller mindre är självförklarande: Dadaglobe Reconstructed.

Bokens första del handlar om Tzaras projekt och alla de forskarmödor efter hans död som ägnats försök att rekonstruera Dadaglobe. Den handlar också om andra dadaantologier, både planerade och förverkligade.

Den andra delen av boken är helt enkelt Dadaglobe rekonstruerad. Man känner genast igen den särpräglade typografin – genomgående sans-seriffer – samt dadaisternas aningen vanvördiga lekfullhet och satiriska humor.

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Många bidrag till antologin är dikter, på rader av olika språk, andra är foton, kollage, teckningar, fotomontage och layouter för boksidor. Bland de medverkande finns namn som Hans ArpMax Ernst, Hannah Höch, Sophie Taeuber-Arp med flera.

Marcel Duchamp har bidragit med dragen till ett schackparti mellan Vit / Picabia / 391 och Svart / Roche / Blindman. Picabia avgick som segrare. Antologin avslutas med ”Manifest Der Unvernuft” av Fried-Hardy Worm. Boken är vacker, välgjord och till brädden full med dada.

Ola Wihlke

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