 | Motherwell - Art - 1981 - 413 pages
Presents a collection of essays, manifestos, and illustrations that provide an overview of the Dada movement in art, describing its convictions, antics, and spirit, through the ... | |
 | Tristan Tzara - Art - 1977 - 118 pages
"This volume contains Tristan Tzara's famous manifestos which first appeared between 1916 and 1921 and which became basic texts of the modern movement and precursors and models ... | |
 | Dawn Ades - Art - 2006 - 320 pages
The revolutionary Dada movement, though short-lived, produced a vast amount of creative work in both art and literature during the years that followed World War I. Rejecting ... | |
 | Leah Dickerman, Brigid Doherty, Centre Georges Pompidou, National Gallery of Art (U.S.) - 2005 - 519 pages
Dada includes many of the key figures in the history of modernism, such as Hans Arp, Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst, Hannah Hoch, John Heartfield, Francis Picabla, Kurt Schwitters ... | |
 | Nikos Stangos - Art - 1981 - 384 pages
No other book on modern and contemporary art presents in as authoritative and concise a manner the ideas that underlie the diverse and radical developments of the last hundred ... | |
 | Mel Gordon - Performing Arts - 1987 - 165 pages
One of the most controversial and ironic of twentieth-century modernisms, Dada swept through the arts after the shock of World War I, when poets, painters, filmmakers, and ... | |
 | Emmanuelle de L'Ecotais - Art - 2002 - 79 pages
Dada. This onomatopoeia suggesting a child's babbling started one of the most important mutations in the history of art. But what is Dada? Born of the First World War, Dada is ... | |
 | Marc Dachy - 2006 - 127 pages
An introduction to the art of Dada explores the anti-aesthetic, anti-object, and anti-art principles of Dadaism as revealed in the innovative painting, sculpture, photography ... | |
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