Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Richard Huelsenbeck


Related Topics

  
  Richard Huelsenbeck - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Richard Huelsenbeck (April 23, 1892 - April 30, 1974) was a poet, writer and drummer born in Frankenau, Germany.
Huelsenbeck emigrated to Zürich, Switzerland in February 1916, where he fell in with the Cabaret Voltaire.
Huelsenbeck was the editor of the Dada Almanach, and wrote Dada Sieght, En Avant Dada and other Dadaist works.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Richard_Huelsenbeck   (184 words)

  
 Richard Huelsenbeck
Huelsenbeck was born in Frankenau, Germany in 1892.
Huelsenbeck and the others created the Club Dada in Berlin which began to flourish and was soon a rival of the Paris Dada movement.
Huelsenbeck was a forceful personality and Berlin Dada revolved around him, he was the most political of the Dadas and saw his art as a political weapon.
mama.indstate.edu /users/dada/huelsenbeck.html   (635 words)

  
 richard huelsenbeck - dadaists - dada - anti*matters - The Spirit of Bohemia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
richard huelsenbeck - dadaists - dada - anti*matters - The Spirit of Bohemia
He had fled from discoloured days and nights, in which aged harlots with grass-green hair lurked in wait for carrion lips and lascivious neighing, and on plains fenced round with bones leeches in helmets paraded before be-medalled scarecrows.
In these poems Huelsenbeck revealed the diabolical spectre of earthly disorder on a scale which makes it possible to comprehend the incomprehensible madness of the inhuman.
www.bohemiabooks.com.au /anti/dada/dadaists/huelsenbeck/huelsenbeck.htm   (163 words)

  
 Words and Worlds:
Dada and the Destruction of Logos, Zurich 1916
  (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
However, Richard Huelsenbeck’s statements/ writings/ contributions to Dada literature allow one to suggest that Dada was established in opposition to what we might recognize as dualistic modes of conventional thinking, of the categorization of concepts, objects, and so on, in oppositional terms (e.g., subject/object; theory/fact, etc.).
In other places he relates the idea that cures for madness and melancholia rested on the constraining of movement--for example, as a passenger on long sea voyages (174); and, as a passenger of an entirely different kind on the ‘rotary machine,’ a device that sought to redistribute the bodily humours of the patient.
Entry for 24.V.1916: “we are never in complete or simultaneous agreement” (63); and Richard Huelsenbeck (1993) ibid: “Whoever turns ‘freedom’ or ‘relativity’ including the insight that the contours of everything shift, that nothing is stable, into a ‘firm creed’ is just another ideologue, like the nihilists who are almost always the most incredible, narrow-minded dogmatists.
www.toutfait.com /duchamp.jsp?postid=1743&keyword=   (4140 words)

  
 John Heartfield: Huelsenbeck   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
Richard Huelsenbeck played a major role in expressing the opinions of the Dadaist with words.
Huelsenbeck was also noted for his fascination with Negro rhythms.
Neverthless, at the risk of one more misunderstanding, we shall attempt a brief formulation; the misunderstanding from which Dadaism suffered is a chronic disease that still poisons the world.
www.towson.edu /heartfield/art/huelsenbeck.html   (235 words)

  
 Richard Huelsenbeck - TheBestLinks.com - April 30, April 23, Berlin, Germany, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
Richard Huelsenbeck - TheBestLinks.com - April 30, April 23, Berlin, Germany,...
Richard Huelsenbeck, April 30, April 23, Berlin, Germany, Literature, Negro...
You can add this article to your own "watchlist" and receive e-mail notification about all changes in this page.
www.thebestlinks.com /Richard_Huelsenbeck.html   (215 words)

  
 The Dada Almanac:0947757627:Huelsenbeck, Richard; Green, Malcolm:eCampus.com
Utter disgust with a society that had created the war (and then expected to survive the peace) spurred them to ever greater demonstrations of revulsion and derision.
Yet it was not all nihilism: many factions worked within the Dada Movement and it was Huelsenbeck's intention to embody most of them in the Dada Almanac.
The largest collection of Dadaist texts ever assembled by the movement, it was originally published in 1920 in a mixture of French and German.
www.ecampus.com /bk_detail.asp?isbn=0947757627   (161 words)

  
 Articles, TOUT-FAIT: The Marcel Duchamp Studies Online Journal
Huelsenbeck belonged to the now well-known group of poets and performers who came together in Zurich during 1916 under the name Dada.
Whilst Dadaist movements appeared in other places, and took on different manifestations, the Zurich Dadaists were concerned principally with poetry and performance.
Life, in short is ever moving forward, whilst language (which, in its attachment to categories of understanding, always works in a backward direction), by contrast, masks a kind of immanent disorder.
www.toutfait.com /issues/volume2/issue_5/articles/scanlan/scanlan.html   (1711 words)

  
 References and Notes for Dada
Richard Huelsenbeck invented his own 'Negro words' and learned several authentic African and South Seas chants from the landlord of the Cabaret Voltaire (an old Dutch seaman).
See, Richard Huelsenbeck, Memoirs of a Dada Drummer, edited by Hans J. Kleinschmidt (New York: Viking Press, The Documents of 20th Century Art, 1974), pp.
Richard Huelsenbeck also wrote a short essay on Stramm's influence upon his poetry and the poetry of Ball, Schwitters, and Hausmann in, Memoirs of a Dada Drummer, edited by Hans J. Kleinschmidt, translated by Joachim Neugroschel (New York: The Viking Press, The Documents of the 20th Century Art, 1974 [1969]), pp.
cotati.sjsu.edu /spoetry/folder6/ng65a.html   (1107 words)

  
 ipedia.com: Dadaism Article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
In 1967, a large Dada retrospective was held in Paris, France.
Richard Huelsenbeck, Memoirs of a Dada Drummer, (University of California Press) (paperback)
Expressionism in film is seen as having its beginnings in lala Dadaism.
www.ipedia.com /dadaism.html   (811 words)

  
 RICHARD HUELSENBECK PAPERS, 1910-1978   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
TheRichard Huelsenbeck Papers contain manuscripts by Huelsenbeck and Raoul Hausmann, correspondence to and from Huelsenbeck with some photographs, clippings and catalogues, and about 130 letters between other correspondents.
160 letters from Huelsenbeck to various correspondents, including about 15 letters to and from Hans Rudolf Hilty and ca.
In addition to his letters to Huelsenbeck, there are letters between Hausmann and Kurt Schwitters, 1946-64 (ca.
www.getty.edu /research/conducting_research/finding_aids/huelsen_m5.html   (190 words)

  
 391: manifestos: dadaist manifesto by tristan tzara, franz jung, george grosz, marcel janco, richard huelsenbeck, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
391: manifestos: dadaist manifesto by tristan tzara, franz jung, george grosz, marcel janco, richard huelsenbeck, gerhard preisz, raoul hausmann, april 1918
by tristan tzara, franz jung, george grosz, marcel janco, richard huelsenbeck, gerhard preisz, raoul hausmann
Tristan Tzara, Franz Jung, George Grosz, Marcel Janco, Richard Hülsenbeck, Gerhard Preisz, Raoul Hausmann,
www.391.org /manifestos/191804dadaist.htm   (632 words)

  
 Poems by Richard Huelsenbeck in English translation
These poems were first published in the volume Phantastische Gebete (Fantastic Prayers) in 1916 (Collection Dada, Zurich), then reissued in 1920 in an expanded edition with illustrations by George Grosz (some of which are shown here) by Malik Verlag, Berlin.
The translation is based on the text of the 1960 edition published by Arche Verlag, Zurich with a new dedication and preface by Richard Huelsenbeck.
© 1916 / 1920 / 1960 by Richard Huelsenbeck, translations © 2000 by Johannes Beilharz
www.jbeilharz.de /huelsenbeck/rh_poems.html   (707 words)

  
 Guardian Unlimited | Arts features | Trouble and Streiff
As with sculpture, the work is made directly from the materials at their disposal, by "following the inner nature" of their voices and crude instruments.
Other instruments in their arsenal, which they cart around Europe by train, include a small bandoneon, an alpenhorn operated with a trombone slide and a mandolin played through a six-inch Marshall stack.
Zehnder is closer to performance art than land art, in the tradition of Dada sound poets such as Hugo Ball and Richard Huelsenbeck.
www.guardian.co.uk /arts/ontheedge/story/0,12830,1230796,00.html   (550 words)

  
 Historic Audio From the Museum of Modern Art Archives
Renowned for its holdings of work by European and American artists of the last forty years, The UBS Art Collection was established in 1970 by Donald B. Marron.
"Dada Lives!" with co-founder Richard Huelsenbeck, telling it like it was (or not).
During MoMA's 1994 Twombly retrospective, curator Kirk Varnedoe brought a stellar group of contemporaries − Brice Marden, Francesco Clemente and Richard Serra − to his table to speak all kinds of things about the mighty scrawler in their midst.
www.wps1.org /include/shows/moma.html   (3064 words)

  
 Richard Huelsenbeck   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
Audio By Visual Artists, TELLUS 21 Richard Huelsenbeck - "Four Poems from Phantastiche Gebete".
Recorded by Aspen Magazine, November 1967, N.Y. Richard Hulsenbeck: "Hatred of the press, hatred of advertising, hatred of sensations, are typical of people who prefer their armchair to the noise of the street..."
Richard Huelsenbeck - BOOKS FROM THE DADA ARCHIVE
www.artpool.hu /Poetry/soundimage/Huelsenbeck.html   (67 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Memoirs of a Dada Drummer (The Documents of Twentieth Century Art): Books: Richard Huelsenbeck,Hans J. ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
Richard Huelsenbeck's "Memoirs of a Dada Drummer", January 23, 2001
This is essential reading for anyone seriously interested in the progression of 20th century Art.
Living in New York City late in his life, Richard Huelsenbeck - a seminal member of the original Dada group formed at Zurich's Cabaret Voltaire - looks back upon his role in Dada and Art (or rather"Anti-Art"), and tries to make some sense of it all.
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0520073703?v=glance   (771 words)

  
 Daily Bleed: On this day, April 23, Emma Goldman, Richard Huelsenbeck, Harry Bridges, Charles H. Kerr, Cesar Chavez,et ...
Daily Bleed: On this day, April 23, Emma Goldman, Richard Huelsenbeck, Harry Bridges, Charles H. Kerr, Cesar Chavez,et al: A People's History!
1892 -- Richard Huelsenbeck (1892-1974) lives, Frankenau, Hessen, Germany.
A former guard at local Communist Party headquarters, Richard St. Clair, testified today that Harry Bridges conferred there several times with local party leaders and longshore officials.
www.eskimo.com /~recall/bleed/0423.htm   (1851 words)

  
 The Daily Bleed: A Calendar Better than boiled Coffee!, Gallery of Saints & Sinners, Timeline, Labor, Radical, Arts, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
Gallery of Saints & Sinners from our Daily Bleed...
April 23, 1892 --Richard Huelsenbeck (1892-1974) lives, Frankenau, Hessen, Germany.
Late in life he lived in New York under the name of Charles R. Hulbeck & practised Jungian psycho-analysis.
recollectionbooks.com /bleed/Encyclopedia/saints/StHuelsenbeckRichard.htm   (182 words)

  
 Richard Huelsenbeck artist and art...the-artists.org
Information on the life, background and work of Richard Huelsenbeck
Personal data and representives, education, signature, exhibition history, auction results and upcoming auctions of Richard Huelsenbeck.
Share your comments about the artist Richard Huelsenbeck
www.the-artists.org /ArtistView.cfm?id=8A01F664-BBCF-11D4-A93500D0B7069B40   (183 words)

  
 Pricenoia.com - Richard Huelsenbeck   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
Authors: Hugo Ball; Richard Huelsenbeck; Walter Serner; Malcolm Green
Kleinkarierte Avantgarde zur Neubewertung des deutschen Dadaismus: Der frühe Richard Huelsenbeck, sein Leben und Werk bis 1916 in Darstellung und Interpretation (Beiträge zur deutschen Literatur des zwanzigsten Jahrhunderts)
Zurich - Dadaco - Dadaglobe: The Correspondence Between Richard Huelsenbeck, Tristan Tzara and Kurt Wolff, 1916-24
www.pricenoia.com /search/Richard+Huelsenbeck/0/1/index.html   (176 words)

  
 MMP Richard Huelsenbeck   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
Writer associated with the Dada movement in Zurich and Berlin.
The International Dada Archive has extensive holdings of works by and about Huelsenbeck.
A large section on Huelsenbeck will be included in a bibliography of Berlin Dada by Timothy Shipe, forthcoming in Dada/Surrealism, no. 19.
www.spress.de /mmp/department/lautpoesie/autoren/huelsenbeck/index.htm   (83 words)

  
 dada is Richard Huelsenbeck
Richard Huelsenbeck discovered Dada in Zürich and became the Dada Drummer.
Huelsenbeck was the initiator and editor of this anthology of dada writing.
Updated 5 februari 2001; Comments to Martin Woestenburg.
members.chello.nl /~m.woestenburg/dada/alphabet/huelsenbeck.html   (40 words)

  
 Artists Info - Richard Huelsenbeck   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
by: Richard Huelsenbeck Walter Sterner Hugo Ball Walter Serner Malcolm Green
Weltdada Huelsenbeck: Eine Biografie in Briefen und Bildern
Zurich-Dadaco-Dadaglobe: The Correspondence Between Richard Huelsenbeck, Tristan Tzaraand Kurt Wolff (1916-1924)
www.artistsinfo.com /search/Richard%20Huelsenbeck-books-Author   (106 words)

  
 A Brief History of Dadaism   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
Dadaism (which derived from the baby-talk syllables "da-da") was a radical international movement in literature and art, initiated by a group of young artists and writers, including Ball, Hoddis, Huelsenbeck, Arp, and Tzara (qq.v.), at the Cabaret Voltaire in Zurich early in 1916.
The New York group, which included Duchamp, Man Ray, and Picabia (journal: The Blind Man), was active primarily in the visual arts.
dada (dadaism; fr Fr, dada, "hobby horse") A literary and artistic movement founded in 1916 in Zurich by Tristan Tzara, with the artist Jean Arp, the poet Hugo Ball, and the medical student Richard Huelsenbeck.
www.dadaboom.com /dada.html   (792 words)

  
 DIRECTORY - DEUTSCH RICHARD HUELSENBECK - WORLD AND DEUTSCH RICHARD HUELSENBECK
von Tristan Tzara, Franz Jung, George Grosz, Marcel Janco, Richard Huelsenbeck, Gerhard Preiß, Raoul Hausmann.
»Stadtgeschichte Berlin: Huelsenbeck, Richard - Ehrungen und Lebensdaten - Hinweis auf eine Richard Huelsenbeck-Gedenktafel.
Beyond Afterlife is a heavy rock band from South Wales who\'s influences include metal music from Iron Maiden to Metallica.
www.themusichype.com /dir/World/Deutsch/Kultur/Literatur/Autoren_und_Autorinnen/H/Huelsenbeck,_Richard   (186 words)

  
 Index of Artists   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-17)
He returned to Berlin in 1959, dying shortly afterwards.
In 1916 Huelsenbeck moved to Zurich, where he became a central figure of the Dada group.
On his return to Berlin, he brought with him Dada and between 1917-22 was a central figure in the Berlin section of the movement.
www.hatii.arts.gla.ac.uk /MultimediaStudentProjects/00-01/9703021w/mmcourse/project/html/Other%20Bits/index_of_artists.htm   (1027 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.