10.5.16 — Anti-Art with Style
Not every art movement has a letterhead, especially a movement dedicated to questioning art. Yet Dada did, and Tristan Tzara set out to use it. Please excuse me if I use another catch-up post to tell you about it.
Tzara, the poet and the movement’s founder, and Francis Picabia wrote fifty artists and writers in ten countries, asking for contributions to an anthology, to be called Dadaglobe. They imagined a volume of up to three hundred pages and ten thousand copies, with four categories of art. It never came to be, but a recreation documents some rakish personalities and iconic works. Could Dada have taken over the planet? 
The letters went out in late 1920, in German (in typescript) or in French (in truly atrocious handwriting). By then the movement was already torn and scattered, with Surrealism to rise from its ashes. No wonder Dadaglobe succumbed to financial woes and infighting. It was also not all that global, apart from exiles like Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray in New York. Contributors came mostly from major European capitals, especially Paris and Berlin. They are nonetheless a litany of modernists—including Constantin Brancusi, who otherwise had little to do with Dada, and Jean Cocteau, the playwright and poet, who often wished that he had as well.
They also had an impressive share of women artists, such as Sophie Taeuber (later Taeuber-Arp), Adon Lacroix, Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven, Luise Straus, Gabrielle Buffet-Picabia, Hannah Höch, and Suzanne Duchamp (here with her Factory of My Dreams). They included others less well known as well, such as Johannes Theodor Baargeld, who grafted himself onto ancient statuary, and Jean Crotti, who portrayed My Other Me. Some who photographed contributors and their work are lost to history. Throw in the contribution of Dada to book art, even an art that died in the making, and the Museum of Modern Art has quite a historical aside, through September 18. Samantha Friedman and Adrian Sudhalter as curators can claim some serious detective work in realizing it. Its impact may depend on one’s patience with memorabilia. Yet that, too, suits suits the period’s argument for mechanical reproduction as an assault on fine art—an argument that resonates to this day.
Contributors were asked for photos of themselves, photos of their work, works on paper in a limited range of color, and page designs. Beyond that, the details were left to them, and they came down very much in favor of art.
As revolutions go, this one had style. Few will recognize the artists, but everyone will recognize their care to look dapper, even when Picabia labels himself at once a failure, a gigolo, and a clown. A few photographs take advantage of the medium to submerge the artist in shadow—or subvert it a bit with added drawing or text. Most, though, do not.
The photos of their work have a comforting familiarity, too, and the Modern helps by often setting them beside the original. Duchamp’s Bride retains its soft browns, and the glass of his To Be Looked at looks all the more shattered in a silvery print by Man Ray. Photos restore Brancusi’s wooden head to its lost figure. All these embody the movement as collaborative, and so does André Breton wearing a placard designed by Picabia. Depuis longtemps, his protest reads, tas d’idiots (“for a long time now, a pile of idiots”). That means you.
Here and there that kind of assault on supposed civilization peeks through. It appears in Man Ray’s construction site as The Most Beautiful Sculpture in America or Jean Arp’s Laocoön as dog intestines. Mostly, though, they take to the particulars of design and the imagination. Even Kurt Schwitters and George Grosz leave memories of war behind. They treat page design as particulars, too, rather than as templates for an artist’s book. Maybe a little at a time, they could create a world.
Read more, now in a feature-length article on this site.






