Dada at 100

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2016 marks the 100th anniversary of the Dada movement’s founding in Zürich, Switzerland. Dadaism arose as a radical, anti-aesthetic, and antiestablishment movement that was founded in its members’ profound revulsion for bourgeois elitism and for the destruction and tragic loss of life taking place during World War I. The creative output of the Dada artists is somewhat hard to categorize, given that they as a group did not espouse a particular aesthetic (and they did not even believe in being an organized group). They did, however, champion spontaneity, collaboration, and countercultural artistic expression. Thus, one is hard-pressed to find traditional examples of painting and sculpture made by Dada artists. They preferred performance (with handmade masks and costumes), collages, photomontages, assemblages, ready-mades (found objects), sound poetry, manifestos, and published journals.

The movement began at the Cabaret Voltaire, which was opened in early February 1916 by writer Hugo Ball as a place for artists, musicians, and writers to gather, commingle, collaborate, exhibit, and perform. Those involved in Dada’s establishment included Ball and fellow writers Tristan Tzara and Richard Huelsenbeck, and artists Hans (“Jean”) Arp, Emmy Hennings, and Marcel Janco, all of whom were in Zürich seeking refuge from their own war-torn countries. Meanwhile, Dada also emerged in New York City with Francis Picabia and Marcel Duchamp at the helm. In 1917 Duchamp created the ready-made piece titled Fountain, a signed urinal and the movement’s most iconic work. After 1918, with the end of the war, artists moved back to their home countries and brought the movement with them, launching groups in Berlin, Hannover, Cologne, and Paris. Each city’s group had its own character.

Dada officially came to a close in 1923, but it is no exaggeration to say that its dedication to ideas and the creative process as well as its general irreverence toward the establishment informed much of what ensued in the art world throughout the 20th century and maybe even into the 21st.