FOUNDATION IN ART & DESIGN CONTEXTUAL STUDIES
DYSTOPIA:DADA
1 Fortunato Depero, Futurist Self-portrait, 1915
2 Marcel Duchamp, Marcel Duchamp with haircut by George de Zayas, 1919 (photograph by Man Ray)
3 Photograph of Tristan Tzara, n.d.
4 Cabaret Voltaire poster, Zurich, May 15th, 1916
5 Hugo Ball, in his "Cubist" costume reciting Caravan, Zurich 1916
6 Marcel Janco, Mask, 1919
7 Dada Fancy Dress Party, Zurich, 1918
8 Tristan Tzara, Dada Disgust, from Dada Manifesto, December, 1918
9 Hans Arp, Automatic Drawing, 1916
10 Hans Arp, Entombment of the Birds and Butterflies (portrait of Tristan Tzara), 1916-1917
11 Hans Arp, Trousse d'un Da, 1920
12 Christian Schad, Schadograph No. 23, c.1918
13 Tristan Tzara, To make a Dada poem....,1917?
14 Man Ray, Portrait of Tristan Tzara, October 1921
15 Anonymous, Raoul Hausmann, Optophonetic Poem, 1918
16 Christian Morgenstern, Phonetic Poem and Man Ray, Phonetic Poem, 1924
17 Kurt Schwitters, The Holy Affliction, 1920 (destroyed)
18 Kurt Schwitters, Santa Claus, 1922
19 Kurt Schwitters, Merz 94, 1920
20 Kurt Schwitters, Merz Construction, 1921
21 Kurt Schwitters, First Merzbau, Waldhauenstrasse,1923-36 (destroyed 1943)
22 First International Dada Fair, Dr Otto Burchard Gallery, Berlin, June 1920
23 Raoul Hausmann and Hannah Höch at the First International Dada Fair
24 Johannes Baader in front of his assemblage Greatness and Downfall of Germany at the First International Dada Fair (also known as The Great Plasto-Dio-Dada Drama, Germany's Great Downfall, by Schoolmaster Hagendorf, also known as The Fantastic Life of the Oberdada)
25 Hannah Höch, Cut with The Cake Knife Dada Through Germany's Last Weimar Beer Belly Cultural Economy, c. 1919
26 George Grosz with John Heartfield, Art is Dead, 1920, with their sculpture, Rabid Bourgeois (destroyed) behind them.
27 George Grosz, Souvenir of my great uncle Auguste, the melancholy inventor, 1919
28 George Grosz, Bourgeois Newlyweds, 1920
29 Raoul Hausmann, The Spirit of Our Time, 1919
30 George Grosz, Le Monteur Heartfield after Franz Jung's attempt to put him on his feet, 1920
31 John Heartfield, Ten Years After: Fathers and Sons, 1924
32 John Heartfield, Hurrah, the Butter is all Finished, 19th December, 1935
33 Raoul Hausmann, Dada Rules!, 1920
34 Raoul Hausmann, ABCD, 1923
35 Max Ernst, Self-Portrait or The Immortality of Buonarotti, 1920
36 Max Ernst, Untitled, 1922
37 Max Errnst, Speech of the Bird Woman, 1920
38 Max Ernst, Health Through Sports, 1920
39 Max Ernst, Sacre Conversazione, 1921
40 Max Ernst, Anatomy as Bride, 1921
41 Max Ernst, Artist's Statement, 1920
42 Anonymous, Tristan Tzara with André Breton, in Paris, in 1920
43 Philippe Soupault, Portrait of A Fool, 1921
44 Marcel Duchamp as Rrose Sélavy, his alter ego, c. 1920, photograph by Man Ray
45 Marcel Duchamp, Nude Descending a Staircase No. 2 , 1912
46 Anonymous, The Rude Descending a Staircase, 1913 (from the New York Evening Sun)
47 André Raffray, Marcel Duchamp retirant, à la requête des cubistes, son Nu descendant un Escalier, du Salon des Indépendents from Marcel Duchamp: La Vie Illustrée, Paris (1983?)
48 André Raffray, Marcel Duchamp achetant au Bazar de l'Hôtel de Ville l'un des objets pour lesquels il forgera à New York, en 1915, le terme Ready-Made, from Marcel Duchamp: La Vie Illustrée (1983?)
49 Marcel Duchamp, Bottlerack, 1914, photograph by Man Ray
50 Marcel Duchamp as R. Mutt, Urinal, 1917, photograph by Alfred Stieglitz
51 Morton Schamberg, God, 1918
52 Man Ray, Long Distance, 1916-17
53 Man Ray, Man , 1917 (or Woman, 1920)
54 Man Ray, The Gift, 1921
55 Man Ray, Rayogram from Les Champs délicieux, 1921-22
56 Man Ray, Rayograph, 1927
57 Man Ray, Rayograph, 1923
58 Francis Picabia, Very Rare Picture on Earth, 1915
59 Suzanne Duchamp, Un et une menacés, 1916
60 Marcel Duchamp, The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even, 1915-23
Recommended book: Robert Short, Dada and Surrealism,Laurence King, £8.95
Recommended reference book: Marc Dachy, The Dada Movement, 1915-23, Skira
Further Dada information:
http://www.artlex.com/ArtLex/d/dada.html
From the Berlin Dada Manifesto 0f 1918:
To be against this manifesto is to be a Dadaist!

