Quantum redactiones paginae "Dada" differant

Content deleted Content added
de avant-garde
de creatoris Hugo Ball et Cabaret Vontaire
Linea 3:
[[Fasciculus:En hod dada museum.jpg|thumb|[[Museum Dada Janco]], ex [[Marcellus Janco|Marcello Janco]] appellatum, in oppido [[Ein Hod]] [[Israel (civitas)|Israelis]].]]
 
'''Dada,''' sive '''Dadaismus,''' fuit [[motus artis]] [[avant-garde]] [[Europa]]ei [[saeculum 20|saeculo vicensimo ineunte]] mromotus. Multi postulant Dadam [[Turicum|Turici]] in [[Helvetia]] coepisse anno [[1916]], unde [[Berolinum|Berolini]] mox percrebuit, sed summa Dada [[Urbs Novum Eboracum|Novi Eboraci]] a [[Hugo Ball]] et Cabaret Voltaire anno superiore fuit, anno [[1915]].<ref>Mario de Micheli, ''Las vanguardias artísticas del siglo XX'' (Alianza Forma, 2006), 135–137.</ref> Apud ''The Language of Art Knowledge'' Donae Budd legitur:
<blockquote>Dada ex responso negante horroribus [[Bellum Orbis Terrarum I|Belli Orbis Terrarum]]<!--N.B. "World War One," non "the first world war" (bellum mundanum primum)--> natum est. Hic motus inter civitates a grege [[artifex|artificum]] et [[poeta]]rum cum [[Cabaret Voltaire (Turicum)|Cabaret Voltaire]] [[Turicum|Turici]] consociatorum coeptus est. Dada [[ratio]]nem et [[logica]]m negavit, nugas, irrationalitatem, et [[intuitus|intuitum]] magni aestimans. Origo nominis ''Dada'' non est manifesta; nonnulli credunt id esse [[vocabulum]] nugatorium. Alii tenent id ex ''da, da'' ('ita, ita' in [[lingua Dacoromanica|Dacoromanice]] significantium) oriri, [[vocabulum|verbo]] a [[Tristanus Tzara|Tristano Tzarae]] et [[Marcellus Janco|Marcello Janco]] [[artifex|artificibus]] [[Romania]]nis crebro adhibito. Alia coniectura adfirmat nomen ''Dada'' per congressionem gregis factus esse cum [[culter]] [[charta]]ceus in [[dictionarium]] Francicum-Theodiscum insertus ad ''dada,'' vocabulum [[Francice|Francicum]] pro ''[[harundo (ludus equinus)|harundine]]''<!--hobbyhorse--> casu indicaret.<ref>[[Anglice]]: "Dada was born out of negative reaction to the horrors of [[World War I]]. This international movement was begun by a group of artists and poets associated with the Cabaret Voltaire in Zurich. Dada rejected reason and logic, prizing nonsense, irrationality and intuition. The origin of the name Dada is unclear; some believe that it is a nonsensical word. Others maintain that it originates from the Romanian artists Tristan Tzara's and Marcel Janco's frequent use of the words "da, da," meaning "yes, yes" in the Romanian language. Another theory says that the name "Dada" came during a meeting of the group when a paper knife stuck into a French-German dictionary happened to point to 'dada', a French word for 'hobbyhorse'.</ref><ref>Dona Budd, ''The Language of Art Knowledge'' (Pomegranate Communications, Inc.).</ref></blockquote> Motus praecipue se cum [[ars oculorum|artibus oculorum]], [[litterae|litteris]], [[poesis|poesi]], [[edictum artis|edictis artis]]<!--art manifestos-->, [[aesthetica|doctrinis artis]], [[theatrum|theatro]], et [[designatio graphica|designatione graphica]] implicavit, et eius animum civilem [[contra bellum]] intendit in obtinentibus [[ars|artis]] normis per opera culturalia [[contra artem]] reiectis. Dada, praeter [[bellum]] reprehensum, contra habitus ''[[bourgeois]]'' fuit, se in rebus [[civilitas|civilibus]] cum sinistro rerum novarum cupido<!--the radical left--> coniungens.
Linea 33:
 
* ''Archives Dada / Chronique.'' [[2005]]. Lutetiae: Hazan.
* [[Hugo Ball|Ball, Hugo]]. [[1996]]. ''Flight Out Of Time.'' Berkeleiae et Angelopoli: University of California Press.
* Jones, Dafydd. [[2014]]. ''Dada 1916 in Theory: Practices of Critical Resistance.'' Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. ISBN 978-1-78138-020-8.
* Biro, M. [[2009]]. ''The Dada Cyborg: Visions of the New Human in Weimar Berlin.'' Minneapoli: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0-8166-3620-6.