Dada Manifestos (1916-1921) by Cbjordheim published on 2015-10-09T08:14:08Z A playlist of the dada manifestos from 1916 to 1921, played by a music box. The manifesto, the text, on an A4-page, is cut into one long strip to fit a music box and then spliced with tape. Some manifestos has been scanned from top to bottom (vertically) and others from left to right (horizontally). The letters D and A in the text are then punctuated, so the absence of D and A (..DADA), is what you hear being played. The first dada manifesto by Hugo Ball (1916) encourages poets to stop writing with words, but rather write the word itself, and Ball states that: "I shall be reading poems that are meant to dispense with conventional language, no less, and to have done with it" In this way this collection of Dada Manifestos acts in accordance with Ball's manifesto, using the word construct as the direct source. Genre Art Contains tracks Dada Manifesto by Hugo Ball (1916) Horizontally by Cbjordheim published on 2015-10-09T08:14:07Z Dada Manifesto by Hugo Ball (1916) Vertically by Cbjordheim published on 2015-10-09T08:14:05Z Dada Cannibalistic Manifesto by Francis Picabia (1920) by Cbjordheim published on 2015-11-16T13:02:45Z Dada Manifesto by Francis Picabia (1920) by Cbjordheim published on 2015-11-16T13:02:43Z What is Dadaism and what does it want in Germany? by Richard Huelsenbeck and Raoul Hausmann (1919) by Cbjordheim published on 2015-11-16T13:02:39Z
Dada Cannibalistic Manifesto by Francis Picabia (1920) by Cbjordheim published on 2015-11-16T13:02:45Z
What is Dadaism and what does it want in Germany? by Richard Huelsenbeck and Raoul Hausmann (1919) by Cbjordheim published on 2015-11-16T13:02:39Z