Sunday, October 14, 2012

Is Dada Art?



Can you call Dada art? A lot of Dada art was comprised of already made pieces, or a destruction of already famous pieces of traditional art. Famous examples of this are Marcel Duchamp’s Mona Lisa with mustache drawing, and the "bicycle wheel". Dadaism challenged everything art stood for at that time.

In 1916, in response to violence and trauma of WWI, people started expressing their feelings through Dadaism. Instead of using other forms of Art to escape life, the people would, “make visible the violence, chaos, and hypocrisies of contemporary life”. Dadaism included performances, publicity stunts, and manipulation of mass media. Overall it blurred the boundaries between art and life. It originally emerged in Zurich, a neutral territory between the countries at war. The introduction took place at a café called, “Cabaret Voltaire”, where free thinking was indefinitely encouraged. It was a way for people to express their offenses toward the war in social, cultural, and political aspects. They took modern art and turned it into abstractions, creating primitive art through expressing their unconscious. The café closed after 6 months, but the Dada movement survived and spread to other countries through the “intellectual leader… the media-savvy Tzara” (Tristan Tzara). He spread Dada activities outside Zurich through exhibition, performances, and manifestos. The art movement popularly prevailed in several major cities including Berlin, Hannover, Cologne, Paris, and New York. It was commonly said, “everybody can Dada”.

A significant amount of people would say Dada redefined art. They would argue that the Dada movement paved the way to many other forms of art we see today.  It, “set the stage for many avant-garde movements- including surrealism, pop art, and performance art”. Without the invention and the practicing of Dadaism who knows where modern art would be today.

                Paul Gauguin defines art as, “either plagiarism or revolution”. Georges Braque says, “art is meant to disturb”. Jean Sibelius defines art as, “the signature of civilizations”. Federico Fellini defined art as, “autobiographical”. Andy Warhol defines art as, “what you can get away with”. To Ad Reinhardt, “art is art. Everything else is everything else”. Art is one of those words where one definition doesn’t do it justice. Art’s meaning is different to every person who views it. Therefore, Dada is art to many but not to all.



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