As
if a magazine had exploded and cutout images and words had floated
down onto a canvas, Hannah Hoch's Cut With the Kitchen Knife Dada
Through the Last Weimar Beer Belly Cultural Epoch of Germany
first appears to be an eclectic photomontage that defies everything
that art had traditionally been.1
Rational explanation seems to fail this work as the bits of this and
that seem to share little obvious relationships. In the top center
of the frame a large cog sits beneath a picture of a row of
buildings, a dancing couple, two letters “nf”, a man's head
pasted onto a woman in a checkered bag dress. The cog overlaps and
is overlapped by bits of people, machinery, elephants and things less
identifiable. One might stare at this work for ages, and without a
complete mastery of the culture and people contemporary to that age,
one might never be able to identify the objects that make up the
composition. Even when one is able to name the object, like “artist
Kathe Kollwitz's head float[ing] above a dancer's body”, no
rational reason as to why the elements were so composed might ever be
forthcoming.2
A collection of projects by James Zike. Covering both fiction and nonfiction, the collection mainly focuses on Philosophy and History.
Showing posts with label Dadaism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dadaism. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Gears, Clocks, Pipes, and Urinals: Art as the Psyche
The
generation of artists that were making art during the beginning of
the 20th
century saw many drastic changes in society. The machine-like nature
of modern life led to the machine-like nature of the first World War.
The basis of this new oil and blood-soaked life caused several
strong reactions in the art and general academic worlds. New
theories about what was, and what should be abounded. Among this
furore of new ideas, two artistic movements captured aspects of
modernity in completely novel ways. Dadaism and
Surrealism, while aesthetically different, share many commonalities,
and are rather similar, even in their differences.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)