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Ralph Ziman has always been a pacifist — so much so that he became a conscientious objector and left his home country of ...
Each floor of DaDa reveals a new chapter in the story Laftimi is telling. The ground floor opens into a sleek restaurant and bar, where modern Moroccan cuisine mingles with international flair. But, ...
The Match Seller is evidence of this. The Disabled Veteran in Society and Art in Weimar German y The millions of veterans returning home physically and psychologically scarred from World War One posed ...
What emerged in Zurich as “Dada” profoundly challenged what it meant to make art, poetry and music in the face of a society tearing itself apart. The Dadaists were consummate improvisers.
The attack coincided with the start of Zurich’s Art Weekend (7-9 June), a three-day event featuring exhibition openings and events across the city’s galleries and institutions.
One hundred years ago today, on July 14, 1916, an avant-garde European artistic and literary movement called Dadaism —or simply Dada—was officially born in Zurich, Switzerland.
Incredibly, Dada has accomplished all this while still managing a full-time career as a lawyer. “It’s backbreaking,” she admits, “but I don’t ever want to be stopped being able to pursue my passions.
392, a decentralized art collective, has published "The Dada Kidnapper’s Manifesto," a daring proclamation of war against artistic conventions and ideals.
According to art historian Francis M. Naumann’s book New York Dada, the year 1915 marked the beginning of the Dada movement in New York.
The Dada exhibition at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. (on view through May 14) presents some 400 paintings, sculptures, photographs, collages, prints, and film and sound ...
A cyber-themed Dada Ball & Bash raised $400,000 for the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis this year, about 15% of its annual operating budget.