Neo dada

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an old phone sitting on top of a table next to a sign that says bellys

Mitchell-Innes & Nash is delighted to announce a large-scale exhibition of Joseph Beuys multiples from the collection of Reinhard Schlegel. Consisting of over 500 works spanning from the early 1960s to his death in 1986, this exhibition is the most significant collection of Beuys multiples to be shown in New York to date. Iconic pieces such as Sled (1969), Felt Suit (1970), The Silence (1973), Art=Capital (1980) and Capri Battery (1985) will be on view starting March 13, 2015. The multiples…

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an advertisement for the pop shop, with many different types of people's faces

I was rummaging through old files prior to donating them to the School of Visual Arts’ The Milton Glaser Design Study Center and Archives, when I stumbled upon a folder called “eccentrics.” The sole contents was a sheath of correspondence to me from Ray Johnson (1927–1995). He was a collagist and leading correspondence artist involved in Neo-Dada and early Pop art. As “New York’s most famous unknown artist” he was associated with the Fluxus movement and in the 1960s founded t

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a woman's face with colorful makeup and red gloves on her chest, in front of a yellow background

2020 Topic 9: Collage It Hi everyone, Keren here to kick off our latest topic which is all about collage. From our earliest memories of making things, we probably did some elements of collage but hopefully we've all developed a more sophisticated style by now! In its basic form, (strictly speaking) collage is a picture created by sticking other pictures or paper (or thinner substances) together to create a new image. Its 'next of kin' is probably assemblage and it would be easy to blur the…

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a drawing of a woman with her arms behind her head, standing on top of a rock

Radical movements often espouse the most conservative of values. Dada claimed it was radical, anti-bourgeoise, and anti-capitalist in its aesthetics. But two of its key members (George Grosz and John Heartfield) refused to include any women (or their work) in the movement. Women, they said, were there to make the sandwiches, pour the beer, and … Continue reading "Hannah Höch, The Artist Who Wanted ‘to show the world today as an ant sees it and tomorrow as the moon sees it’"

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