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Destruction Was My Beatrice - Dada and the Unmaking of the Twentieth Century (Hardcover)
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Destruction Was My Beatrice - Dada and the Unmaking of the Twentieth Century (Hardcover)
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In 1916, as World War I raged around them, a group of bohemians
gathered at a small cabaret in Zurich, Switzerland. After
decorating the walls with art by Picasso and other avant-garde
artists, they embarked on a series of extravagant performances.
Three readers simultaneously recited a poem in three languages a
monocle-wearing teenager performed a spell from New Zealand another
young man sneered at the audience, snapping a whip as he intoned
his Fantastic Prayers." One of the artists called these sessions
both buffoonery and a requiem mass." Soon they would have a more
evocative name: Dada.In Destruction Was My Beatrice , modernist
scholar Jed Rasula presents the first narrative history of Dada,
showing how this little-understood artistic phenomenon laid the
foundation for culture as we know it today. Although the venue
where Dada was born closed after only four months and its acolytes
scattered, the idea of Dada quickly spread to New York, where it
influenced artists like Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray to Berlin, where
it inspired painters George Grosz and Hannah Hoech and to Paris,
where it dethroned previous avant-garde movements like Fauvism and
Cubism while inspiring early Surrealists like Andre Breton, Louis
Aragon, and Paul Eluard. The long tail of Dadaism, Rasula shows,
can be traced even further, to artists as diverse as William S.
Burroughs, Robert Rauschenberg, Marshall McLuhan, the Beatles,
Monty Python, David Byrne, and Jean-Michel Basquiat, all of
whom,along with untold others,owe a debt to the bizarre wartime
escapades of the Dada vanguard.A globe-spanning narrative that
resurrects some of the 20th century's most influential artistic
figures, Destruction Was My Beatrice describes how Dada burst upon
the world in the midst of total war,and how the effects of this
explosion are still reverberating today.
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