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~ The world is made up of elements, catched by light-writing or assemblage.

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Dadaglobe Reconstructed

15 Monday Feb 2016

Posted by dragermeurtant in art, Dada, kunst, Uncategorized

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Dada, Dadaglobe, exhibition, Kunsthaus, reconstruction, Zürich

In Kunsthaus, Zürich, Switzerland a remarkable exhibition is held from February 1st to May 1st, 2016.One-hundred years after one of the founders of DaDa, Trstan Tzara, aimed to create a book “DadaGlobe” with contributions from many dada artists, a reconstruction has been accomplished.

Background

With the 19th century increase in industrialisation and in migration to cities plus the enhanced nationalism in Europe and elsewhere there was more tension in society, which was also articulated by artists such as the ‘futurist’ Filippo Tomasso Marinetti. The call to get rid of existing structure in language and art by art movements like futurism, and in different direction, by kubism, anticipated Dadaism.

At the start of WW-One, several artists who had fled from being drafted into the military or were resident in Zürich assembled in a movement of protest in this city in Switzerland. They detested the role of the establishment / authorities who were responsible for – as Richard Huelsenbeck later, in 1920, wrote – “the massing <of> men in the trenches of Northern France and giving them shells to eat”.

Hans (or Jean) Arp came from the Elsace, a repeated playground for German and French nationalistic frenzy. With Hugo Ball and Richard Huelsenbeck, both german, and the rumenian Tristan Tzara and Marcel Janco they founded Dada at Cabaret Voltaire, a small theatre started in February 1915 by Hugo Ball and his friend Emmy Hennings.

A prominent feature of dadaist aesthetic was its ridicule of materialistic and nationalistic stance, and it was expressed in poetry, prose, painting, sculpture and performance. The mediums of collage and of assemblage, that had surfaced a while earlier, were embraced with ardor.

Blumenfeld Erwin_Bloomfield President Dada Chaplinist.jpg

Erwin Blumenfeld: “Bloomfield, President-Dada-Chaplinist”, 1921
Collage mit braun-getönten Silbergelatine-Fotoausschnitten (Portrait Blumenfelds) über Silbergelatine-Foto-Aktpostkarte, mit Rasterdruck und Tinte, 13,4 x 8,8 cm
Kunsthaus Zürich, © Nachlass Erwin Blumenfeld

 

While often seen as the first vocalization of babies, the word Dada – as the dadaists tried to explain -, means nothing or everything. As Hugo Ball mentioned “All the words are other people’s inventions. I want my own stuff, my own rhythm, and vowels and consonants too, matching the rhythm and all my own” (first Dada soiree, Zürich 14th July 1916). Later attributions are that the word Dada comes from French, from a children’s word for hobbyhorse, the name being arbitrarily chosen, or from romenian da-da meaning yes-yes (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dada)

ernst_max_le_rossignol_chinois
Max Ernst, Chinesische Nachtigall, 1920, Collage und Tusche auf Papier, 12,5 x 9 cm, Musée de Grenoble, © 2016 ProLitteris, Zürich

 

A major force in Dada was Tristan Tzara. Exemplary is his statement about poetry:

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.

tzara_portrait_for_dadaglobe

Unbekannter Fotograf: Portrait von Tristan Tzara, um 1920
Silbergelatineabzug, 11,4 x 18,6 cm, Collection Chancellerie des Universités de Paris, Bibliothèque littéraire Jacques Doucet, Paris
 (The following paragraph is taken from the press briefing by Kunsthaus Zürich)

100 ARTWORKS, 100 DOCUMENTS

With contributions by artists and writer s from seven countries, many of whom created new works for his publication, co-founder of Dada and originator of the ‘Dadaglobe’ project Tristan Tzara (1896-1963) set out to present the apotheosis of Dada as a literary and artistic movement of international scope and to document it for posterity. ‘Dadaglobe’ was envisaged as a paean to the work of art in reproduction; but financial and organizational difficulties meant that the book never saw the light of day. The result is a void where a magnum opus should be – at the heart of Dada’s reception and the artistic production of the avant-garde in general. Now, a hundred years after the foundation of Dada, an exhibition and a comprehensive publication aim to fill that void. ‘Dadaglobe Reconstructed’ turns the analytical spot light on this notoriously restless and virtually unclassifiable art movement. It writes a fundamental, hitherto missing chapter in the history of modernism, in which Tzara’s Dada legacy shapes the vocabulary of artistic discourse.

 

hausman_raoul_p

Raoul Hausmann, P, um 1920-1921 Collage mit bedrucktem Papier und Tinte, 31,2 x 22 cm Hamburger Kunsthalle, Kupferstichkabinett © 2016 ProLitteris, Zürich

To honor the Kunsthaus curators and contributing artists / musea / collections with the establishment of the DadaGlobe Reconstruction, I will contribute – on the worldpress webpage only – my assemblage “Kaleidokopus”

paleidokopus-2.jpg

Paleidokopus: the movement / is slantwise / cautious / and under guidance. // Threat can come / from all sides. // Fear feeds mania, / and reason / does not allay / thirst.

Assemblage, wood, metal, paint, 38 x 23 x 53cm, © drager meurtant, 2014 (more at http://www.meurtant.exto.org)

Literature:

Richard Huelsenbaeck: En Avant Dada: A History of Dadaism, 1920, in Robert Motherwell, editor, The Dada poets and painters, Anthology, 2nd ed. Belknap, Harvard University Press, Massachusetts, London, 1951.

Dada and Surrealism: Texts and Extracts. http://pers-www.wlv.ac.uk/~fa1871/surrext.html

Samantha Kavky: Max Ernst’s Post-World War I Studies in Hysteria; The Space Between Volume VIII:1 2012 pp 37-63, http://www.monmouth.edu/the_space_between/articles/SamanthaKavky2012.pdf

Acknowledgement: the author thanks Kunsthaus Zürich for enabling use of text and images in this blog.

Relevancy of art or artists

11 Friday Sep 2015

Posted by dragermeurtant in art, kunst

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art-with-a-mission, conservering, degenerate-art, entartete-kunst, relevancy-of-art

The relevancy of art or artists

In Hyperallergic (digital newsletter) a comment was written by Jillian Steinhauer with the title “Behold Nazi Postcards from the Infamous Degenerate Art Show” on November 26, 2014

(see: http://hyperallergic.com/165346/behold-the-nazi-postcards-from-the-infamous-degenerate-art-show/)

Poster Entartete Kunst

Jillian Steinhauer reacts to an announcement* of the auction of items from the Interbellum, namely 5 postcards displaying art as shown at the exhibition Entartete Kunst in München and other German and Austrian museums in 1938 plus 5 photographs of moments during the opening of one of these exhibitions and a poster (broadside).

*“The Degenerate Art Show postcards, broadside, and photographs will be sold together, as lot 133, in Swann Auction Galleries’ Vernacular Imagery, Photobooks, & Fine Photographs sale, on December 11, 10:30am.”

The author rightfully states that the viewer must look beyond an innocent display or surface, that postcards often present, since here the dark meaning of the views and subsequent action of the nazi authorities is not outspoken.

The postcards, the essay tells, were “apparently shot by Heinrich Hoffmann, Hitler’s chief photographer, (and) are notably simple: three of them show individual “degenerate” artworks, one the building’s exterior, the last an installation view.

Jillian Steinhauer adds “The Nazis, one supposes, fell into the usual trap: they expected everyone to see it their way, no added explanation or convincing necessary. These disgusting, offensive artworks would speak for themselves. Today they still do — only they’re telling a vastly different story.

Display of 'Entartete Kunst'

photo of art on display in Berlin at one of the exhibitions on “Entartete Kunst”

– – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Drager Meurtant is rather allergic to trends and powers in current society pushing artists to be politically correct. Having seen several expositions in 2014 memorizing art in Wold War One and the developments in the so-called Weimar Republic and subsequent take-over by nazis, he commented to the posting in Hyperallergic:

“With time, every wound will come to it’s end, leaving a scar, an income to reconstructive surgeons, or a dead body. we visited a remarkable exhibition in Soest (Museum Wilhelm Morgner, Sauerland, Germany) placing art (that had not been destroyed) by ‘Entartete Künstler” opposed to some artists that were enthousiastic followers of the NSDAP. The latter had not been possible for a long time in Germany. It is a good thing these postcards can now be seen as oddities. But to some, seeing these, the scar will itch, says drager meurtant”

listen

Photograph of “Listen”, assemblage by Drager Meurtant

text to assemblage:

Listen: If I listen / and hear no sound / or only the sound / that is not. // Than I whisper / my bitterness / in the ear of my / alter ego. // But what to say / to someone with / gauze before the eyes.

(November, 2014)

Vergankelijkheid en de moderne kunst (De hoofdpijn van de curator)

05 Tuesday May 2015

Posted by dragermeurtant in kunst

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bederfelijk, conservering, felt suit, joseph beuys, kunst, materiaal

In het Tate’s Online Research Journal van 31 Januari 2012, besteden de auteurs, Rachel Barker and Alison Bracker, aandacht aan de vergankelijkheid van bepaalde kunstwerken van Joseph Beuys, en hoe dat musea voor problemen plaatste.

.Eén werk, Felt Suit (pak van vilt) bleek – na verloop van tijd in de collectie – vol motten te zitten, in alle stadia van ontwikkeling. Restauratie was duur, en er was onzekerheid of restauratie wel gewenst was. Joseph Beuys had immers bij eerdere gelegenheid aangegeven weinig waarde te hechten aan optimaal behoud: “in fact, when asked how one should care for Felt Suit”, he once announced, “I don’t give a damn. You can nail it to the wall. You can also hang it on a hanger, ad libitum! But you can also wear it or throw it into a chest”. (persoonlijke noot van Schellmann and Klüser 1980, volgens opgave van de auteurs). Later, daarentegen, leek hij vervanging van het vergane vilt om het idee van het kunstwerk te behouden, wél te accepteren.

Ook gebruik van ander bederfelijk materiaal zoals vet (Fat Battery) door Joseph Beuys, leverde kopzorgen bij de conservators. Twee canisters gevuld met natuurlijk vet (margarine) verbonden door een stuk vilt, gingen in de volgende jaren corrosie vertonen, en het vilt raakte doordrenkt met vet. Je zou kunnen denken, dit zo bedoeld was door de kunstenaar, die de vergankelijkheid van levende materialen deel liet uitmaken van zijn kunstwerken. Toch – volgens de auteurs – had Beuys bij ander werk (zoals Eurasia 1966) wel de wens dit te fixeren in de staat, die hij het gaf bij de vervaardiging. Kortom, als de artiest niet consistent is over zijn/haar visie met betrekking tot het conserveren van zekere kunstwerken, dan wordt het voor conservatoren wel erg lastig.

Grappig is het wel te lezen, dat bij het Felt Suit, na gebruik van gas om de motten te doden, besloten werd om er een container met Vapona strips (insecticide) bij te plaatsen. Er wordt niet bij opgemerkt, dat de dynamiek van het kunstwerk, een dergelijke toevoeging als het ware uitnodigde. Althans, wanneer niet werd gekozen voor de route van volledige ontbinding, – mijns inziens te rechtvaardigen -, dan maar de alternatieve route van het toevoegen van middelen om dit proces anders te doen verlopen. Auteursrechtelijk moet dan wel geregeld worden wat de plaats van de conservator wordt in de aangepaste kunstvorm.

De meeste musea hebben besloten het proces van verval, zo traag mogelijk te doen plaats vinden, maar niet te stoppen, of het materiaal te vernieuwen.

Bron: http://www.tate.org.uk/download/file/fid/7404

Met dankbaar gebruik van bovenstaande bron, opgesteld door Drager Meurtant ©, 2013

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