old magazine article typewriter
   
 
  Home
  About Us
  Log In / Register
  Contact Us
  Legal Disclaimer
 



 
Recently Added Articles
 1925: Going Green
 American Civil War Magazine Articles
 Chronology
 Gettysburg
 Lincoln
 Assorted Famous People and Celebrities
 Aviation Magazine Articles
 Charles Lindbergh
 Women Pilots
 Zeppelins and Dirigibles
 Benito Mussolini
 Black American Magazine Articles
 Ku Klux Klan
 Lynchings
 Cartoons 1914-1922
 China - 20th Century
 Sino-Japanese War
 Early Cars & Automotive History
 1950s Cars
 Early Television
 European Royalty
 Duke of Windsor
 Elizabeth II
 F.D.R. and the Depression
 Fashion
 1930s
 1940s
 Flappers
 Men’s Fashion
 Personal Beauty
 Football
 Golf Magazine Articles
 Immigration
 Canadian Immigration
 Jews in the 20th Century
 College Antisemitism
 Living History
 Mahatma Gandhi
 Manners and Society
 Modern Art
 Dada
 Movies
 Animation
 Gone with the Wind Articles
 Hollywood Blacklist
 It's A Wonderful Life
 Music
 Big Band 1930s-1940s
 Eric Satie
 Native Americans
 New York Magazine Articles
 Old Iraq
 Opinions About Americans
 American English
 Prohibition Cartoons
 Prohibition Magazine Articles
 Religion
 Silent Movie Articles
 Cartoons
 Charlie Chaplin
 D.W. Griffith
 Douglas Fairbanks & Mary Pickford
 Soviet History Articles
 Tennis Articles
 The Nazis
 Adolf Hitler
 Titanic Magazine Articles
 Twentieth Century Writers
 U.S. Army Uniforms of World War One
 Overseas Caps
 Trench Coats
 U.S. Armies, Corps and Divisions
 U.S. Navy Uniforms of World War One
 U.S. Marine Corps Uniforms
 Weird Inventions
 Women’s Suffrage
 Woodrow Wilson
 World War I Posters
 World War One
 African Americans
 Aftermath
 Animals
 Artists
 Belleau Wood
 British Uniforms
 Cemeteries
 Clip Art
 Color Photographs
 Doughboys
 Gas Warfare
 Inventions and Weapons
 Letters
 Lusitania
 Prelude
 Snipers
 Stars and Stripes Articles
 Versailles Treaty
 Women
 Writing
 World War Two
  Combat Training
 Aftermath
 At Home
 Atomic Bomb
 D-Day
 General Eisenhower
 Japanese Internment
 Kamikaze Attacks
 Paris
 Post-War Japan
 Prelude
 Prisoners of War
 VE Day
 VJ Day
 Weapons and Inventions
 Yank Magazine Articles
 General Marshall
  

Modern Art - Dada

Click here to email this page to a friend

Buy at Art.com
Dada Revue 391, No.8, Zur...

Francis Picabia (Vanity Fair, 1915)



Dada at the Museum of Modern Art (Literary Digest, 1936)

An amusing, if blasphemous, art review of the Museum of Modern Art's 1936 Dada and Surrealism exhibit. Interestingly the journalist credited Joan Miro as the author of the Dada movement.

"The Marx Brothers of the art world are displayed, in all their unrestrained glory, in an exhibition of Fantastic Art in New York this week."

"An exhibition of this type is always easy prey for the practical joker. A similar show in Paris several years ago exhibited a shovel, submitted by a well-known but discontented artist as an example of perfect symmetry."

Marcel Duchamp Returns to New York City (Vanity Fair, 1915)

Exempted from serving with the French military in World War I, the artist Marcel Duchamp returned to New York City where he triumphed during the Armory Show of 1913; together he and his two brothers, Raymond Duchamp-Villon and Jacques Villon, all showed their groundbreaking art. Marcel was the toast of New York and his modern painting, "Nude Descending a Staircase" was regarded as a masterwork.

Why Dada? (The Century Magazine, 1922)

"Why Dada?" is a thoughtful essay by Sheldon Cheney (1886 - 1980), a Dada enthusiast and founder of the American monthly "Theatre Arts Magazine". This is a fine article which attempted to explain Dada to the American public and identified several American artists who subscribed to Dada principles.

"...at last years exhibitions the Futurists and Cubists joined the academicians in denouncing the Dadaists as fakers, charlatans, and ignoramuses who know nothing of the laws of art and only wish to shock the public into considering them a sensation! And the Dadaists get unlimited joy out of the situation, but hold to the center of the stage..."

Tristann Tzara on Dada (Vanity Fair, 1922)

An essay by one of the founders of Dada, Tristan Tzara (Sami Rosenstock a.k.a. Samuel Rosenstock; 1896 – 1963), who eloquently explains the origins of the movement:

"Dadaism is a characteristic symptom of the disordered modern world...To the exiled intellectuals of Switzerland, humanity seemed to have gone insane - all order was crashing to destruction, all values were turned upside down - and, in accordance with this spirit, they began a set of wild practical jokes, elaborately silly meetings and fantastic manifestos which burlesqued, in their violence of the life around them."

*A Film Clip Explaining the Origins of Dada*

Paris Dada and Jazz (Vanity Fair, 1922)

Vanity Fair's Edmund Wilson (1895 – 1972), reported his view on Dada as it existed in Paris, the influence of Jazz and the art of Jean Cocteau (1889 – 1963). The article is subtitled:

"The Influence of Jazz and Americanization of French Literature and Art"

 


 

 300x250_newspapers_dark_1.gif 
 
© Copyright 2005 Old Magazine Articles
 
Alessi S.P.A. US