According to its co-founder, the German poet Hugo Ball (the pianist in Janco's painting), Janco was present for the opening night of the Cabaret Voltaire, on 5 February 1916. "The place was. Hugo Ball performing at Cabaret Voltaire in 1916 Switzerland was a neutral country during World War I and among the many refugees coming to Zürich were artists from all over Europe.
Cabaret Voltaire Hugo Ball Libro Castelvecchi Cahiers IBS
Hugo Ball ( German: [bal]; 22 February 1886 - 14 September 1927) was a German author, poet, and essentially the founder of the Dada movement in European art in Zürich in 1916. Among other accomplishments, he was a pioneer in the development of sound poetry . Life and work Hugo Ball Summary of Hugo Ball Hugo Ball's major contribution as leader and co-founder along with his girlfriend, cabaret performer, Emmy Hennings, of the Dada movement, was to articulate the collective's radical nihilistic and iconoclastic ideology. Cabaret Voltaire's story begins at the start of World War I. Hugo Ball, a German actor, tried to enlist in the army but was refused entry. Any sense of patriotism that existed within him is said to have vanished after the invasion of Belgium, which he witnessed. Hugo Ball, (born February 22, 1886, Pirmasens, Germany—died September 14, 1927, Sant'Abbondio, Switzerland), writer, actor, and dramatist, a harsh social critic, and an early critical biographer of German novelist Hermann Hesse ( Hermann Hesse, sein Leben und sein Werk, 1927; "Hermann Hesse, His Life and His Work").
Cabaret Voltaire « eRevista Performatus
Hugo Ball was a German artist who focused his creativity on performing arts. He opened Cabaret Voltaire a performing arts space that became, essentially, the beginnings of the Dada movement. Mar 1, 2020 • By Jacqueline Lewis, BA Art History and Architecture Hugo Ball was born in Pirmasens, Germany on February 22, 1886. Hugo Ball, a poet and Dadaist, wearing a Cubist costume at the Cabaret Voltaire in Zurich in 1916. July 8, 2016 On July 14, 1916, the poet Hugo Ball proclaimed the manifesto for a new. Abstract. By putting Hugo Ball's anthology Cabaret Voltaire (1916) into dialogue with the live performances at the Cabaret Voltaire, this essay offers a refreshed view of this seminal Dada document. It approaches Cabaret Voltaire as a "living magazine," a phrase Ball used to describe the space at Spiegelgasse No. 1 in Zurich. The publication's cabaret-like characteristics, mobility, and. Jens Ohlig/CC BY-SA 2.0. In July 1916 German artist and poet Hugo Ball stood in the tiny performance space at Zurich 's Cabaret Voltaire, and read the first Manifesto introducing the world to a.
Portrait of Hugo Ball,1916 Performance art, Dada movement, Portrait
Extracts from Dada documentaries + (to my knowledge) the ORIGINAL 'Karawane' Sound Poetry performance of 1916 + a quick rendition of Dada in 2 minutes + an K. German artist Hugo Ball came here to escape the carnage of the trenches. In February 1916 he teamed up with a bunch of eccentric emigres to stage a Dada show at Cabaret Voltaire. Not even the.
Karawane is a poem by Hugo Ball, performed in the Cabaret Voltaire.Karawane es un poema dadaista, escrito por Hugo Ball en 1917. Karawane is a poem by Hugo Ball, originally performed in the Cabaret Voltaire, Zurich in 1916. The printed version was later published in the Dada Almanach, as Ball´s performance can be seen as one of the key moments in the development of Dada.
Cabaret Voltaire Hugo Ball (1916 Nº1)
Hugo Ball, founder of the Cabaret Voltaire and leader of the Zürich-based early Dadaists, articulated their philosophy as one that wished to refuse and destroy the rational language of modernity, which to them symbolized the death and decline of creativity. Dada artists expressed these sentiments through a variety of media, including sound. The Cabaret Voltaire in Zurich's old town is the birthplace of Dada and home to a bar, cafe and exhibition space devoted to Dada today.. Cabaret Voltaire - the first Dada Publication by Hugo Ball, 1916. Before the founding of Dadaism, Ball had written his Dada Manifesto, which came to define the Dadaist movement. He first read it out on.