Memoirs of a Dada DrummerRichard Huelsenbeck's memoirs bring to life the intellectual, artistic, and political concerns of the individuals involved in the Dada movement and document its controversies. Illustrated with woodcuts and drawings by George Grosz and Hans Arp, 'Memoirs of a Dada Drummer' also includes a sixteen-page section of rare photographs. |
Contents
Foreword to the Paperback Edition by Rudolf E Kuenzli | ix |
The New ManArmed with the Weapons of Doubt | xvii |
The Dada Drummer I | 1 |
Jean Arp | 96 |
Tristan Tzara | 102 |
A Knight in Connecticut | 108 |
George Grosz | 116 |
August Stramm | 123 |
Jean Tinguely | 130 |
The Case of Dada | 136 |
Dada and Existentialism | 142 |
Psychoanalytical Notes | 149 |
Regimes | 172 |
On Leaving America for Good | 184 |
| 191 | |
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Common terms and phrases
abstract art activity aesthetic aggressive America Arp's artist audience Ball's beauty became become Berlin Berlin dada Cabaret Voltaire called Cézanne color Communist creative critic cubism cubists cultural dada Dada Drummer dada's dadaists Emmy Hennings everything existence existential existentialist expression expressionist fact feel felt Franz Jung friends George Grosz German Hans Arp Hans Richter Hausmann Hugo Ball human ideas intellectual interested Janco Kandinsky knew literary literature lived magazine manifesto Marcel Duchamp meaning ment modern art moral movement movie never object painter painting paradox Paris personality Phantastische Gebete philosophy Picasso played poems poet poetry political problem protest psychoanalysis psychological published Raoul Hausmann reality realize recited revolution revolutionary Richard Huelsenbeck Richter Sartre Schwitters social sound-poems spiritual Stramm's surrealism surrealist symbols talk theater things thought Tinguely's tion Torres-García Tristan Tzara Tzara Umba wanted words write wrote York Zurich



