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  2. Hugo Ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugo_Ball

    A voice-cut-up collage of his poem "Karawane" by German artist Kommissar Hjuler, member of Boris Lurie's NO!art movement, was released on an LP on the Greek Shamanic Trance label in 2010. "Karawane" was also set to music in 2012 by Australian composer Stephen Whittington , as an "anti- song cycle " of seventeen songs — one for each line of ...

  3. Cut-up technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cut-up_technique

    Prior to this event, the technique had been published in an issue of 391 in the poem by Tzara, dada manifesto on feeble love and bitter love under the sub-title, TO MAKE A DADAIST POEM. [5] [1] In the 1950s, painter and writer Brion Gysin more fully developed the cut-up method after accidentally rediscovering it.

  4. List of Dadaists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Dadaists

    It includes those who are generally classed into different movements, but have created some Dadaist works. A - D. Pierre Albert-Birot (22 April 1876 – 25 July 1967)

  5. Dragan Aleksić - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragan_Aleksić

    Aleksić started publishing his poems in collaboration with Ljubomir Micić's avant-garde magazine Zenit.Despite initially dismissing the Dada movement in the 2nd issue of the magazine in March 1921, the following April issue contained an article by Dragan Aleksić written from Prague, as well as two of his Dadaist poems.

  6. Lorraine O'Grady, groundbreaking conceptual artist, dies at 90

    www.aol.com/news/lorraine-ogrady-groundbreaking...

    Her first work, "Cutting Out the New York Times," is a series of 26 Dadaist poems formed from printed headlines that ran in the paper in 1977. After that, she remained in New York to produce art.

  7. Shinkichi Takahashi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinkichi_Takahashi

    Shinkichi Takahashi (高橋 新吉, Takahashi Shinkichi, 1901 – 1987) was a Japanese poet. He was one of the pioneers of Dadaism in Japan. [1] According to Makoto Ueda, he is also the only major Zen poet of modern Japanese literature.

  8. Dada Manifesto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dada_Manifesto

    The Dada Manifesto (French: Le Manifeste DaDa) is a short text written by Hugo Ball detailing the ideals underlying the Dadaist movement. It was presented at Zur Waag guildhall in Zürich at the first public Dada gathering on July 14, 1916. [1]

  9. Tristan Tzara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tristan_Tzara

    After July 1922, Marcel Janco rallied with Vinea in editing Contimporanul, which published some of Tzara's earliest poems but never offered space to any Dadaist manifesto. [104] Reportedly, the conflict between Tzara and Janco had a personal note: Janco later mentioned "some dramatic quarrels" between his colleague and him. [105]