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  2. Robert J. Hirsch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_J._Hirsch

    Of Hirsch's recent exhibition The Sixties Cubed, critic and artist Bruce Adams wrote: “At the core of this work—and perhaps of all Hirsch’s art in recent memory—is [Brion] Gysin's cut-up technique, which utilizes the element of chance in its random rearrangement of sentence fragments." Hirsch, Adams wrote, created "a free-flowing ...

  3. Brion Gysin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brion_Gysin

    Brion Gysin (19 January 1916 – 13 July 1986) was a British-Canadian painter, writer, sound poet, performance artist and inventor of experimental devices.. He is best known for his use of the cut-up technique, alongside his close friend, the novelist William S. Burroughs.

  4. Cut-up technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cut-up_technique

    The cut-up technique (or découpé in French) is an aleatory narrative technique in which a written text is cut up and rearranged to create a new text. The concept can be traced to the Dadaists of the 1920s, but it was developed and popularized in the 1950s and early 1960s, especially by writer William Burroughs .

  5. Décollage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Décollage

    Décollage is an art style that is the opposite of collage; instead of an image being built up of all or parts of existing images, it is created by ripping and tearing away or otherwise removing pieces of an original image. [1] The French word "décollage" translates into English literally as "take-off" or "to become unglued" or "to become ...

  6. Photomontage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photomontage

    Photomontage is the process and the result of making a composite photograph by cutting, gluing, rearranging and overlapping two or more photographs into a new image. [1] Sometimes the resulting composite image is photographed so that the final image may appear as a seamless physical print.

  7. Surrealist techniques - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surrealist_techniques

    In Dialectique de Dialectique they had proposed the further radicalization of surrealist automatism by abandoning images produced by artistic techniques in favour of those "resulting from rigorously applied scientific procedures," allegedly cutting the notion of "artist" out of the process of creating images and replacing it with chance and ...

  8. Hannah Höch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hannah_Höch

    Cut with the Kitchen Knife is "an explosive agglomeration of cut-up images, bang in the middle of the most well-known photograph of the seminal First International Dada Fair in 1920" (Hudson). [25] This photomontage is an excellent example of a piece that combines these three central themes in Höch's works: androgyny, the "New Woman" and ...

  9. Photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photography

    This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 3 February 2025. Art and practice of creating images by recording light For other uses, see Photography (disambiguation). Photography of Sierra Nevada Photography is the art, application, and practice of creating images by recording light, either electronically by means of an image sensor, or chemically ...