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  2. Dada was the direct antecedent to the Conceptual Art movement, where the focus of the artists was not on crafting aesthetically pleasing objects but on making works that often upended bourgeois sensibilities and that generated difficult questions about society, the role of the artist, and the purpose of art.

  3. Aug 21, 2024 · According to the most widely accepted account, the name was adopted at Hugo Ball ’s Cabaret Voltaire in Zürich, during one of the meetings held in 1916 by a group of young artists and war resisters that included Jean Arp, Richard Hülsenbeck, Tristan Tzara, Marcel Janco, and Emmy Hennings.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. May 31, 2023 · Dadaism was an avant-garde German art movement that emerged during the early twentieth century, in direct opposition to World War I. After experiencing the horror and devastation of war, artists congregated in Zurich to express their shared disdain for the hypocrisies of the bourgeois society that had led them into war.

    • Rosie Lesso
  5. “Dada,” he gloated, “very fortunately, is no longer an issue and its funeral, about May 1921, caused no rioting.” But Dada, which wasn’t quite dead yet, would soon leap from the grave.

    • Paul Trachtman
  6. Nov 26, 2019 · Key Takeaways: Dada. The Dada movement began in Zurich in the mid-1910s, invented by refugee artists and intellectuals from European capitals beset by World War I. Dada was influenced by cubism, expressionism, and futurism, but grew out of anger over what its practitioners perceived as an unjust and senseless war.

  7. www.tate.org.uk › art › art-termsDada - Tate

    Dada was an art movement formed during the First World War in Zurich in negative reaction to the horrors and folly of the war. The art, poetry and performance produced by dada artists is often satirical and nonsensical in nature. Raoul Hausmann. The Art Critic (1919–20) Tate. © ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2024.

  8. Dada emerged amid the brutality of World War I (1914–18)—a conflict that claimed the lives of eight million military personnel and an estimated equal number of civilians. This unprecedented loss of human life was a result of trench warfare and technological advances in weaponry, communications, and transportation systems.