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Dada... | 0:00:02 | 0:00:05 | |
Dada. | 0:00:05 | 0:00:06 | |
Some words seize the imagination and draw you in, | 0:00:06 | 0:00:10 | |
inviting you to delve deeper. | 0:00:10 | 0:00:12 | |
For me, Dada is just one of those words. | 0:00:13 | 0:00:17 | |
An idea, a call to arms and a way of thinking. | 0:00:17 | 0:00:21 | |
OK, ready, here we go. | 0:00:24 | 0:00:26 | |
We're going to embark on a journey. | 0:00:26 | 0:00:28 | |
I'm going to take you, dear viewer, to a place where | 0:00:28 | 0:00:30 | |
no television programme has ever been before, but... | 0:00:30 | 0:00:33 | |
No, what I am going to do is try and persuade you that Dada is | 0:00:33 | 0:00:37 | |
much, much more than an obscure art movement with a funny name. | 0:00:37 | 0:00:40 | |
Oh, yes. | 0:00:40 | 0:00:42 | |
100 years ago, in the midst of a nonsensical war, | 0:00:43 | 0:00:47 | |
Dada made an art out of the absurd. | 0:00:47 | 0:00:49 | |
Mocking politicians, | 0:00:51 | 0:00:54 | |
satirising the media, | 0:00:54 | 0:00:56 | |
and ridiculing centuries of culture, | 0:00:56 | 0:00:59 | |
Dada created a new way of looking at the world. | 0:00:59 | 0:01:03 | |
Sometimes shocking, often anarchic, | 0:01:03 | 0:01:06 | |
and always difficult to define, its legacy would span a century. | 0:01:06 | 0:01:11 | |
Dada's tentacles have spread right across our culture, | 0:01:11 | 0:01:14 | |
from punk | 0:01:14 | 0:01:17 | |
to the Pythons | 0:01:17 | 0:01:18 | |
and from Damien Hirst | 0:01:18 | 0:01:20 | |
to David Bowie. | 0:01:20 | 0:01:22 | |
The world has gone gaga for Dada. | 0:01:22 | 0:01:26 | |
Do you want me to shout "Dada" now? | 0:01:26 | 0:01:28 | |
No. | 0:01:28 | 0:01:29 | |
Everybody's heard of Dada, | 0:01:29 | 0:01:30 | |
but no-one seems to know exactly what it is. | 0:01:30 | 0:01:33 | |
Dada takes delight in contradiction. | 0:01:33 | 0:01:35 | |
So, to help me pin it down, I've enlisted the help of a few friends. | 0:01:35 | 0:01:40 | |
Dada! | 0:01:40 | 0:01:41 | |
Daaaaaaaa-daaaaaaa! | 0:01:41 | 0:01:43 | |
Da-da, Da-da, Da-da-da. | 0:01:43 | 0:01:45 | |
Da! Da! | 0:01:45 | 0:01:48 | |
And, with their assistance, I'll be recreating some Dada performances, | 0:01:48 | 0:01:53 | |
destroying some artworks, | 0:01:53 | 0:01:56 | |
and pulling some mischievous stunts. | 0:01:56 | 0:01:59 | |
There's my Dadaist act for the day. | 0:01:59 | 0:02:01 | |
And all of this to establish why, out of all the isms, movements and | 0:02:01 | 0:02:06 | |
manifestos of the 20th century, | 0:02:06 | 0:02:08 | |
it was the Dadaists who proved the most important, | 0:02:08 | 0:02:12 | |
giving birth not only to a lot of modern art, | 0:02:12 | 0:02:14 | |
but also shaping comedy, music and political protest. | 0:02:14 | 0:02:19 | |
MUSIC: Da Da Da by Trio | 0:02:19 | 0:02:24 | |
LAIDBACK RUSTIC MUSIC PLAYS | 0:02:28 | 0:02:30 | |
I first came across Dada at art school in the early '80s. | 0:02:34 | 0:02:38 | |
It was funnier and more anarchic than anything else I'd | 0:02:38 | 0:02:41 | |
discovered and it didn't always have to make sense. | 0:02:41 | 0:02:45 | |
I soon embarked on nonsensical performances of my own. | 0:02:45 | 0:02:49 | |
I did a performance called I, Kestrel, | 0:02:52 | 0:02:54 | |
where I dropped potatoes from out of a cardboard box. | 0:02:54 | 0:02:59 | |
I was in a band that had no name, but we smelt of curry. | 0:02:59 | 0:03:03 | |
It emerged from flasks at the side of the stage. | 0:03:03 | 0:03:06 | |
Some people have called some of my performances Dada-esque, and they've | 0:03:08 | 0:03:11 | |
certainly always flown in the face of logic, leading me to think... | 0:03:11 | 0:03:15 | |
have I've been subconsciously influenced? Hmmm. | 0:03:15 | 0:03:20 | |
Maybe. | 0:03:20 | 0:03:21 | |
-Hmmm. -Hmmmmm. | 0:03:26 | 0:03:29 | |
But where did all this Dadaism begin? | 0:03:32 | 0:03:35 | |
Que es Dada? | 0:03:39 | 0:03:41 | |
Dada - a word chosen at random from a French-German dictionary. | 0:03:43 | 0:03:48 | |
"Yes, yes," in Romanian. | 0:03:48 | 0:03:50 | |
A hobby horse in French. | 0:03:53 | 0:03:55 | |
Whatever the case, it all began 100 years ago in an unlikely place. | 0:03:57 | 0:04:03 | |
CUCKOO! | 0:04:03 | 0:04:05 | |
It wasn't in Berlin | 0:04:05 | 0:04:07 | |
or Paris, | 0:04:07 | 0:04:08 | |
or any of your usual hotbeds of Bohemian outrage. No. | 0:04:08 | 0:04:13 | |
The first artists to scare the hell out of the Establishment | 0:04:13 | 0:04:16 | |
launched their revolution here in, of all places, Zurich. | 0:04:16 | 0:04:20 | |
SWISS YODELLING SONG PLAYS | 0:04:22 | 0:04:23 | |
When you think of Zurich, | 0:04:27 | 0:04:29 | |
the last thing you think about is a radical, anarchic art movement. | 0:04:29 | 0:04:32 | |
What you might think about is cheese, clocks, | 0:04:32 | 0:04:35 | |
or Swiss Army knives. | 0:04:35 | 0:04:37 | |
But radical art movements? No. | 0:04:37 | 0:04:39 | |
But it was exactly that "There's nothing to see here" | 0:04:39 | 0:04:41 | |
reputation, that staying in neutral whilst their neighbours were all | 0:04:41 | 0:04:46 | |
fighting to the death that made Zurich the breeding ground for Dada. | 0:04:46 | 0:04:51 | |
In 1916, Europe was tearing itself apart, and some wanted | 0:04:57 | 0:05:03 | |
no further part in the madness and destruction they saw around them. | 0:05:03 | 0:05:07 | |
Amidst the violence and upheaval of the First World War, artists, poets | 0:05:10 | 0:05:14 | |
and freethinkers from both sides of the conflict gathered here in | 0:05:14 | 0:05:17 | |
Zurich to avoid the horrors of the battlefront. | 0:05:17 | 0:05:21 | |
MUSIC: Boogie Stop Shuffle by Charles Mingus | 0:05:21 | 0:05:23 | |
It was a city of exiles, and among them a group of unlikely | 0:05:23 | 0:05:25 | |
revolutionaries formed a bizarre protest movement - Dada. | 0:05:25 | 0:05:30 | |
In a world where governments created carnage and the normal order | 0:05:30 | 0:05:33 | |
had become nonsensical, the Dadaists felt the only appropriate | 0:05:33 | 0:05:37 | |
artistic response was to be truly and deliberately absurd. | 0:05:37 | 0:05:41 | |
And like all the best world-changing movements, | 0:05:43 | 0:05:46 | |
Dada began here in a dirty, dingy underground drinking hole. | 0:05:46 | 0:05:50 | |
With nothing more than the humble dream of selling extra | 0:05:55 | 0:05:58 | |
sausages and beer, the proprietor of this place sanctioned a cabaret. | 0:05:58 | 0:06:03 | |
Little did he know what he was letting himself in for. | 0:06:03 | 0:06:07 | |
The Cabaret Voltaire, still here 100 years on, kick-started | 0:06:08 | 0:06:12 | |
a movement that would wreak havoc across Europe and beyond. | 0:06:12 | 0:06:16 | |
-So, welcome, Jim, to Cabaret Voltaire... -Thank you, Adrian. | 0:06:17 | 0:06:20 | |
-..the birthplace of Dada. -Cheers. | 0:06:20 | 0:06:23 | |
So, how did the Cabaret Voltaire start here, then? | 0:06:23 | 0:06:27 | |
Hugo Ball, who was a writer and a director in the theatre in Munich, | 0:06:27 | 0:06:31 | |
and Emmy Hennings who was a singer in cafes and bars, | 0:06:31 | 0:06:35 | |
they came here in 1915 and they were hired in | 0:06:35 | 0:06:38 | |
a cabaret just down the street, and after a while they thought, | 0:06:38 | 0:06:42 | |
"We should have our own cabaret." | 0:06:42 | 0:06:44 | |
They send out an invitation to artists. | 0:06:44 | 0:06:47 | |
Was there any kind of direction, | 0:06:47 | 0:06:49 | |
or it was just "Do whatever you want to do?" | 0:06:49 | 0:06:51 | |
Today, one would say it was an open stage. | 0:06:51 | 0:06:53 | |
-A free-for-all. -Yeah, free-for-all. -Yeah. | 0:06:53 | 0:06:55 | |
So, the Dadaists mobilised themselves for war, | 0:06:55 | 0:06:58 | |
but theirs was a battle against reason itself. | 0:06:58 | 0:07:01 | |
BRAIN WHIMPERS LIKE A DOG | 0:07:01 | 0:07:03 | |
Hugo Ball appeared in a bizarre bishop's outfit. | 0:07:03 | 0:07:05 | |
Romanian poet Tristan Tzara cast a Maori tribal spell. | 0:07:08 | 0:07:13 | |
Swiss artist Sophie Taeuber improvised a dance, wearing | 0:07:15 | 0:07:18 | |
a cardboard mask. | 0:07:18 | 0:07:20 | |
And a dozen balalaika players turned up. | 0:07:20 | 0:07:24 | |
The German poet Richard Huelsenbeck snapped a riding whip, shouting... | 0:07:24 | 0:07:29 | |
..and was joined by Tristan Tzara and Marcel Janco to perform | 0:07:33 | 0:07:36 | |
in German, English and French all at the same time. | 0:07:36 | 0:07:39 | |
Sounds like a great show. | 0:07:43 | 0:07:44 | |
But a bit of a shock for the locals. | 0:07:44 | 0:07:47 | |
What sort of people did they attract in here, then? | 0:07:47 | 0:07:50 | |
-People who come to drink beer and eat sausages and... -And absinthe. | 0:07:50 | 0:07:54 | |
-..and absinthe, yeah. -Yeah. | 0:07:54 | 0:07:55 | |
And they didn't come to see somebody talking about art or reciting poems. | 0:07:55 | 0:07:59 | |
-Yeah. -Basically they had to be better than the absinthe | 0:07:59 | 0:08:03 | |
or better than beer and sausages. | 0:08:03 | 0:08:05 | |
This really reminds me of where I started off. | 0:08:05 | 0:08:08 | |
-I started off in a pub in Southeast London... -Yeah. | 0:08:08 | 0:08:11 | |
..which was about the same size as this, the same layout, | 0:08:11 | 0:08:14 | |
and it was the same kind of thing. | 0:08:14 | 0:08:16 | |
-I used to get people out of the audience... -Yeah. -..and say, "Do you want to do something?" | 0:08:16 | 0:08:20 | |
And it'd be a different show every week, and it was just, like, | 0:08:20 | 0:08:23 | |
strangely so similar. | 0:08:23 | 0:08:25 | |
So, did you have some absinthe at that time, maybe, and that's why...? | 0:08:25 | 0:08:28 | |
-Didn't have absinth, no. We just had lager. -Lager. | 0:08:28 | 0:08:31 | |
THEY LAUGH | 0:08:31 | 0:08:33 | |
For Hugo Ball, language had been hijacked by the warmongers | 0:08:33 | 0:08:37 | |
who twisted words to justify their violent acts, | 0:08:37 | 0:08:40 | |
so out went words and in came some unusual poetry. | 0:08:40 | 0:08:44 | |
A lot of these words, they're made up, aren't they? | 0:08:44 | 0:08:47 | |
-Bloiko - I could say that in my accent. Bloiko. -Bloiko. | 0:08:47 | 0:08:51 | |
That's nice, yeah. | 0:08:51 | 0:08:53 | |
-Ogrogoooo. What is it, the umlaut? There's an umlaut. -Ogrogoooo. | 0:08:53 | 0:08:58 | |
-Ogrogoooo. -Ogrogoooo. | 0:08:58 | 0:08:59 | |
What's this? Bulomen. | 0:08:59 | 0:09:01 | |
I think you can probably get that in a face cream. | 0:09:01 | 0:09:04 | |
ADRIAN LAUGHS | 0:09:04 | 0:09:06 | |
Some of those words may feel a bit familiar. | 0:09:06 | 0:09:08 | |
Uvavu. | 0:09:08 | 0:09:10 | |
Well, look, the audience is in and we're ruining it for them, | 0:09:10 | 0:09:13 | |
really, by still being here, so we should make a dramatic entrance... | 0:09:13 | 0:09:17 | |
-Yes. -..very soon. | 0:09:17 | 0:09:19 | |
'Tonight I'm going to be re-staging one of the founding moments | 0:09:19 | 0:09:23 | |
'in the history of Dada, here at its birthplace. | 0:09:23 | 0:09:27 | |
'For Hugo ball's most iconic performance, | 0:09:27 | 0:09:29 | |
'he wore his most outlandish outfit.' | 0:09:29 | 0:09:32 | |
So we'll try and fit Jim into Hugo's costume. | 0:09:33 | 0:09:37 | |
JIM LAUGHS | 0:09:37 | 0:09:39 | |
-Pull it off. -OK. | 0:09:39 | 0:09:42 | |
You misjudged my bulk. | 0:09:42 | 0:09:44 | |
'There's a few serious faces in the audience. | 0:09:47 | 0:09:49 | |
'God knows what they're going to make of my transformation into Hugo Ball.' | 0:09:49 | 0:09:53 | |
How's that? | 0:09:53 | 0:09:55 | |
-The words don't make any sense. -I know. | 0:09:55 | 0:09:58 | |
-LAUGHTER -There's only one word. | 0:09:58 | 0:10:00 | |
-Don't try and understand, just... -I'm not going to. | 0:10:00 | 0:10:02 | |
-..go with the flow. -Right, start, because my specs are falling off my nose with the sweat. | 0:10:02 | 0:10:07 | |
Thanks. LAUGHTER | 0:10:07 | 0:10:09 | |
Gadji beri bimba glandridi laula lonni cadori. | 0:10:09 | 0:10:16 | |
Gadjama tuffm i zimzalla binban gligla wowolimai bin beri ban. | 0:10:16 | 0:10:22 | |
Elifantolim brussala bulomen brussala bulomen tromtata. | 0:10:24 | 0:10:30 | |
Velo da bang band affalo purzamai affalo purzamai lengado tor. | 0:10:31 | 0:10:35 | |
LAUGHTER | 0:10:37 | 0:10:38 | |
I'm getting lost. | 0:10:38 | 0:10:40 | |
Gaga di bumbalo bumbalo gadjamen. | 0:10:40 | 0:10:43 | |
Gaga di bling blong. | 0:10:43 | 0:10:45 | |
Gaga blung. | 0:10:45 | 0:10:47 | |
APPLAUSE | 0:10:47 | 0:10:51 | |
I'm collapsing. | 0:10:53 | 0:10:55 | |
Take this off. LAUGHTER | 0:10:56 | 0:10:59 | |
Thank you. And there we are. | 0:10:59 | 0:11:02 | |
Um... | 0:11:02 | 0:11:03 | |
What was that? LAUGHTER | 0:11:03 | 0:11:06 | |
APPLAUSE | 0:11:06 | 0:11:09 | |
-His outfit was ridiculous. -Yeah. | 0:11:13 | 0:11:15 | |
JIM LAUGHS | 0:11:15 | 0:11:17 | |
-I'm not knocking it at all. -OK. | 0:11:17 | 0:11:19 | |
Oh, I'm right on it. | 0:11:19 | 0:11:20 | |
If he's there, doing his poetry in his magic bishop's costume, | 0:11:20 | 0:11:24 | |
he's already got a congregation, so he's begun a religion. | 0:11:24 | 0:11:29 | |
Yeah. And so that's why all these people come here, like a pilgrimage. | 0:11:29 | 0:11:32 | |
-And what a great shrine. -Yeah. -What a fantastic place. | 0:11:32 | 0:11:35 | |
-If you've got to have a religion, I'm going to be in here. -Yeah. | 0:11:35 | 0:11:41 | |
'Hugo Ball wrote that, "Everyone has been seized by an indefinable intoxication. | 0:11:41 | 0:11:46 | |
' "The little cabaret is about to come apart at the seams and is | 0:11:46 | 0:11:50 | |
' "getting to be a playground for crazy emotions." ' | 0:11:50 | 0:11:53 | |
Are you following me? | 0:11:53 | 0:11:56 | |
Just five months after it opened, the cabaret closed, | 0:11:56 | 0:11:59 | |
but Dada was just beginning. | 0:11:59 | 0:12:03 | |
In July 1916, Hugo Ball delivered the first in | 0:12:03 | 0:12:07 | |
a series of speeches announcing the Dada Manifestos. | 0:12:07 | 0:12:12 | |
These speeches parodied the more grandiose written manifestos | 0:12:12 | 0:12:15 | |
of the time. | 0:12:15 | 0:12:17 | |
Dada is a new tendency in art. How does one achieve eternal bliss? | 0:12:17 | 0:12:23 | |
By saying Dada. | 0:12:23 | 0:12:25 | |
How does one become famous? By saying Dada. | 0:12:25 | 0:12:29 | |
A line of poetry is a chance to get rid of all the filth that | 0:12:29 | 0:12:34 | |
clings to this accursed language, | 0:12:34 | 0:12:37 | |
as if put there by a stockbroker's hands, | 0:12:37 | 0:12:41 | |
hands wrought smooth by coins. | 0:12:41 | 0:12:44 | |
Dada is the heart of words. | 0:12:44 | 0:12:47 | |
So, what were they doing? | 0:12:48 | 0:12:50 | |
Let's say, with the poetry, the meaningless, pointless, | 0:12:50 | 0:12:53 | |
senseless words within the poetry, | 0:12:53 | 0:12:55 | |
was it a reaction against the meaningless, senseless, | 0:12:55 | 0:12:58 | |
pointless war that was surrounding them? | 0:12:58 | 0:13:01 | |
Or were they just trying out something new and having fun with it? | 0:13:01 | 0:13:04 | |
I don't know. | 0:13:04 | 0:13:06 | |
Do you know? | 0:13:06 | 0:13:09 | |
In neighbouring Germany, life was becoming increasingly | 0:13:10 | 0:13:13 | |
desperate as the war drew to a close, | 0:13:13 | 0:13:15 | |
and nowhere was this more so than in Berlin. | 0:13:15 | 0:13:19 | |
This devastated city would provide the setting for Dada's new | 0:13:19 | 0:13:22 | |
incarnation as the German poet Richard Huelsenbeck returned home from Zurich. | 0:13:22 | 0:13:27 | |
Richard Huelsenbeck wound up the crowd, | 0:13:31 | 0:13:34 | |
claiming the Zurich Dadaists were pro-war. | 0:13:34 | 0:13:37 | |
"And Dadaism is still pro-war today. | 0:13:37 | 0:13:41 | |
"Things are still not cruel enough." | 0:13:41 | 0:13:44 | |
In Berlin, Club Dada would unleash a fiercely political rage. | 0:13:44 | 0:13:49 | |
The First International Dada Fair shook Berlin with its | 0:13:49 | 0:13:53 | |
shocking satire of the German Establishment. | 0:13:53 | 0:13:56 | |
And it didn't just tease the Establishment - | 0:13:56 | 0:13:59 | |
it mercilessly mocked the powers that be. | 0:13:59 | 0:14:02 | |
John Heartfield hung a dummy from the ceiling dressed in German | 0:14:02 | 0:14:05 | |
military uniform and with a pig's snout for a face. | 0:14:05 | 0:14:08 | |
And Otto Dix showed veterans disabled by war injuries. | 0:14:08 | 0:14:12 | |
These artists took genuine risks, | 0:14:12 | 0:14:15 | |
and many were arrested for their actions. | 0:14:15 | 0:14:18 | |
But in the male-dominated world of Berlin Dada, Huelsenbeck, Heartfield | 0:14:18 | 0:14:22 | |
and Dix met their match in Hannah Hoch. | 0:14:22 | 0:14:25 | |
MALE VOICES SCREAM More than holding her own at the art fair, | 0:14:27 | 0:14:31 | |
Hoch satirised the entire German Establishment with her | 0:14:31 | 0:14:34 | |
masterpiece, Cut With The Kitchen Knife, | 0:14:34 | 0:14:36 | |
pioneering a radically subversive new artform - photomontage. | 0:14:36 | 0:14:40 | |
Dada's ground-breaking visual techniques would have a huge | 0:14:43 | 0:14:46 | |
impact on Neville Brody, one of the pioneers of modern graphic design. | 0:14:46 | 0:14:50 | |
His interest in Dada has seeped into his cutting edge art | 0:14:52 | 0:14:55 | |
direction for The Face magazine and his iconic post-punk sleeve | 0:14:55 | 0:14:59 | |
designs for bands like, you guessed it... | 0:14:59 | 0:15:02 | |
Cabaret Voltaire. | 0:15:02 | 0:15:04 | |
Neville, here we've got an early bit of photomontage by Hannah Hoch. | 0:15:06 | 0:15:12 | |
That's the Kaiser, isn't it? | 0:15:12 | 0:15:14 | |
So, this is his moustache here. | 0:15:14 | 0:15:16 | |
Well, this is what I like about it, yeah. Oh, it's two wrestlers. | 0:15:16 | 0:15:19 | |
Well, you've got little Hannah Hoch down here, | 0:15:19 | 0:15:22 | |
this tiny head is a kind of signature. | 0:15:22 | 0:15:25 | |
And then these are the countries where women had the right to | 0:15:25 | 0:15:29 | |
vote at the time. | 0:15:29 | 0:15:31 | |
This is the first real kind of powerful use of photomontage | 0:15:31 | 0:15:35 | |
as a real tool of subversion. | 0:15:35 | 0:15:37 | |
Why was it? Was it because you'd got photos in newspapers? | 0:15:37 | 0:15:40 | |
The free access of, like, | 0:15:40 | 0:15:42 | |
printed photographs meant that someone like Hannah Hoch could come | 0:15:42 | 0:15:45 | |
in, cut it out, combine it all and create a completely new narrative. | 0:15:45 | 0:15:49 | |
So this is a whole new way of looking. | 0:15:49 | 0:15:51 | |
-Like a big political cartoon as well, isn't it? -Yeah. | 0:15:51 | 0:15:54 | |
This was shocking to the bourgeoisie. | 0:15:54 | 0:15:56 | |
It was deliberately non-aesthetic. It's not pretty. | 0:15:56 | 0:15:59 | |
And this is something that we've seen a lot since. | 0:15:59 | 0:16:03 | |
You know, punk, Jamie Reid, the Sex Pistols covers. | 0:16:03 | 0:16:06 | |
Punk hijacked Dada's use of photomontage as | 0:16:11 | 0:16:14 | |
a weapon of subversion, | 0:16:14 | 0:16:16 | |
from Jamie Reid's Sex Pistols covers to Linder sterling's feminist | 0:16:16 | 0:16:19 | |
artworks and sleeve designs for bands like the Buzzcocks. | 0:16:19 | 0:16:23 | |
But punk is only the most obvious child of Dada. | 0:16:24 | 0:16:27 | |
'Club Dada's striking visuals extended to magazines and journals. | 0:16:29 | 0:16:34 | |
'I've brought along a copy of the first Dada publication, | 0:16:34 | 0:16:38 | |
'and I've got a feeling this is going to be right up Neville's street.' | 0:16:38 | 0:16:41 | |
What is this? | 0:16:41 | 0:16:43 | |
This is coming directly out of the photomontage approach, | 0:16:43 | 0:16:47 | |
but now it's typomontage. | 0:16:47 | 0:16:49 | |
-Yeah, so it's using everything. -This is really stunning. | 0:16:49 | 0:16:52 | |
It's an amazing piece of freeform typography. | 0:16:52 | 0:16:56 | |
This really was ahead of its time. | 0:16:56 | 0:16:58 | |
Just looks incredibly modern. | 0:16:58 | 0:16:59 | |
There was a lot of punk stuff that was done that looked like this. | 0:16:59 | 0:17:02 | |
-A lot of art in the '60s and 70s had this feel, and the '50s. -Yeah. | 0:17:02 | 0:17:06 | |
And this had a big influence on my work, directly - the idea of going | 0:17:06 | 0:17:10 | |
off-grid, nothing lines up, it's all at an angle, | 0:17:10 | 0:17:14 | |
yet it has so much energy. | 0:17:14 | 0:17:16 | |
-It is completely haphazard. -Yeah. | 0:17:16 | 0:17:18 | |
I actually remember I did a whole record cover where all the type was | 0:17:18 | 0:17:21 | |
at angles and the printer helped me by straightening them all up again. | 0:17:21 | 0:17:26 | |
He said, "I've fixed it for you now, young man." | 0:17:26 | 0:17:28 | |
This is beautiful, though, isn't it? | 0:17:28 | 0:17:30 | |
It's gorgeous, just an extraordinary piece. | 0:17:30 | 0:17:33 | |
Makes me want to give it up - it's all been done, really, hasn't it? | 0:17:33 | 0:17:36 | |
JIM LAUGHS | 0:17:36 | 0:17:38 | |
'A lot of today's generation of graphic designers think | 0:17:38 | 0:17:41 | |
'they're nicking ideas from Neville Brody, but what they don't realise | 0:17:41 | 0:17:44 | |
'is that some of the freshest looking magazine layouts date back to Dada.' | 0:17:44 | 0:17:48 | |
While Hannah Hoch and others were busy setting the agenda | 0:17:50 | 0:17:53 | |
for 20th century culture, | 0:17:53 | 0:17:55 | |
one lone wolf managed to grab all of the world's media attention. | 0:17:55 | 0:17:59 | |
Architect Johannes Baader was in his own Dada universe. | 0:18:01 | 0:18:05 | |
He called himself Super Dada, or Dada Chief, | 0:18:05 | 0:18:09 | |
and announced himself as President Of The Earth. | 0:18:09 | 0:18:13 | |
No ego problems there, then. | 0:18:13 | 0:18:15 | |
On April Fools' Day, | 0:18:15 | 0:18:16 | |
he warned the district of Berlin that Dada forces were on | 0:18:16 | 0:18:20 | |
their way, and 2,000 people were there to fend off the Dada invasion. | 0:18:20 | 0:18:25 | |
When the time came, he wrote his own obituary but announced his | 0:18:25 | 0:18:28 | |
resurrection the following day. | 0:18:28 | 0:18:31 | |
Richard Huelsenbeck warned, | 0:18:31 | 0:18:33 | |
"Watch out for Baader, who has nothing to do with our thoughts. | 0:18:33 | 0:18:37 | |
"He has compromised Dada in Berlin to such an extent with his | 0:18:37 | 0:18:42 | |
"idiocies that I can't even get a small item into the press." | 0:18:42 | 0:18:47 | |
MUSIC: Let's Dance by David Bowie | 0:18:47 | 0:18:49 | |
According to one of the Dada gang, "Dada was a dancing epidemic | 0:18:49 | 0:18:53 | |
"with simultaneous beginnings in different parts of the world." | 0:18:53 | 0:18:58 | |
In Zurich, Dada had taken a hammer to language. | 0:18:59 | 0:19:02 | |
In Berlin, it attacked the political Establishment. | 0:19:02 | 0:19:06 | |
And now, in New York, Dada took aim at art itself. | 0:19:06 | 0:19:11 | |
JAZZ PIANO MUSIC PLAYS | 0:19:12 | 0:19:14 | |
Marcel Duchamp, the king of conceptual art, | 0:19:16 | 0:19:20 | |
forced the grand old guardians of the art world to ask | 0:19:20 | 0:19:24 | |
themselves a question they hadn't had to think about before. | 0:19:24 | 0:19:27 | |
"If you put a toilet in art gallery, does that make it art?" | 0:19:27 | 0:19:32 | |
And, "Should I start stroking my beard yet?" | 0:19:32 | 0:19:35 | |
Duchamp caused scandal by presenting a urinal signed "R Mutt" | 0:19:37 | 0:19:41 | |
to the board of the Society For Independent Artists. | 0:19:41 | 0:19:45 | |
It was rejected and the story went in Dada journals like The Blind Man. | 0:19:45 | 0:19:50 | |
It was just one in a series of ready-mades - | 0:19:50 | 0:19:54 | |
everyday objects exhibited as art - | 0:19:54 | 0:19:58 | |
a closed window, | 0:19:58 | 0:20:00 | |
a snow shovel, | 0:20:00 | 0:20:03 | |
a bottle rack, | 0:20:03 | 0:20:05 | |
and a bicycle wheel. | 0:20:05 | 0:20:07 | |
And Duchamp provoked the rage of the art establishment still | 0:20:08 | 0:20:12 | |
further by defacing an old master. | 0:20:12 | 0:20:16 | |
A copy at least. | 0:20:16 | 0:20:19 | |
He called the work Elle A Chaud Au Cul, | 0:20:19 | 0:20:21 | |
which in French sounds just like, | 0:20:21 | 0:20:24 | |
"She's got a hot ass." | 0:20:24 | 0:20:26 | |
For the Dadaists, this series of provocations was enough for | 0:20:26 | 0:20:29 | |
Duchamp to gain entry into their club, whether he liked it or not. | 0:20:29 | 0:20:34 | |
Artist Cornelia Parker has made art out of everyday objects herself, | 0:20:37 | 0:20:41 | |
but not without flattening them first with a steam roller. | 0:20:41 | 0:20:45 | |
She's my kind of artist. | 0:20:45 | 0:20:47 | |
And, for Cornelia, Duchamp, the reluctant Dadaist, | 0:20:50 | 0:20:52 | |
has been a lifelong inspiration. | 0:20:52 | 0:20:54 | |
Was Marcel Duchamp a Dadaist? | 0:20:56 | 0:20:59 | |
He was a Dadaist by default, I think. | 0:20:59 | 0:21:02 | |
The toilet...R Mutt's toilet, that's the thing that everyone knows, | 0:21:02 | 0:21:05 | |
-isn't it? -R Mutt's toilet, yeah, I suppose you introduce the idea of | 0:21:05 | 0:21:08 | |
anything you just go and buy in the shop becoming an art object. | 0:21:08 | 0:21:11 | |
-And he did, and he caused a big stink. -He did. | 0:21:11 | 0:21:13 | |
The idea of putting that into a salon where you're supposed | 0:21:13 | 0:21:16 | |
to put accepted work seemed to be what it was all about, | 0:21:16 | 0:21:20 | |
really, more than the object itself. | 0:21:20 | 0:21:23 | |
A lot of things just started with him, | 0:21:23 | 0:21:25 | |
because he was just up for anything. | 0:21:25 | 0:21:27 | |
Duchamp sort of opened up this seam, you know, | 0:21:27 | 0:21:30 | |
in kind of art that was kind of...everything was quite | 0:21:30 | 0:21:34 | |
stable and quite...progressing nicely, | 0:21:34 | 0:21:37 | |
but he'd just kind of create this big fissure, you know, this | 0:21:37 | 0:21:40 | |
fault-line that allowed other people just to be completely maverick. | 0:21:40 | 0:21:45 | |
Duchamp's idea for the readymade has inspired generations of | 0:21:47 | 0:21:50 | |
artists since, | 0:21:50 | 0:21:52 | |
and at the time inspired a collaboration with artist and | 0:21:52 | 0:21:55 | |
photographer Man Ray. | 0:21:55 | 0:21:57 | |
This is a fantastic photograph by Man Ray of Duchamp's | 0:21:57 | 0:22:01 | |
half-finished sculpture which was called The Large Glass. | 0:22:01 | 0:22:05 | |
He was allowing dust to accumulate on it, | 0:22:05 | 0:22:09 | |
because he wanted to incorporate the dust into the piece, | 0:22:09 | 0:22:11 | |
and I think he left a note for the cleaner, cos | 0:22:11 | 0:22:13 | |
he had a cleaning lady, saying, you know, "Don't touch, dust breeding." | 0:22:13 | 0:22:17 | |
-Did Man Ray come round to his house and then...? -Spot it and like it? -And Marcel said, | 0:22:17 | 0:22:23 | |
"Here, have a look at this, look at all this dust I'm breeding here." | 0:22:23 | 0:22:26 | |
And he says, "We'll just take a picture of it, shall we?" | 0:22:26 | 0:22:29 | |
-I'm sure it went something like that. -I bet it is, yeah. | 0:22:29 | 0:22:31 | |
I think some of the best art is serendipitous. | 0:22:31 | 0:22:33 | |
-I quite like the idea of, you know, negligence becoming art. -CORNELIA LAUGHS | 0:22:33 | 0:22:38 | |
Yeah. And have you been influenced by Dada? | 0:22:38 | 0:22:41 | |
I'm very influenced by Duchamp. I think he's, most probably, if | 0:22:41 | 0:22:44 | |
I had to pick one artist to say that he's had the most influence on me. | 0:22:44 | 0:22:48 | |
Yeah. | 0:22:48 | 0:22:50 | |
Dada managed to be really infantile and outrageous but at the | 0:22:50 | 0:22:54 | |
same time made people think about things afresh. | 0:22:54 | 0:22:57 | |
I'm off with Cornelia to stage our own Dada intervention. | 0:22:59 | 0:23:02 | |
MUSIC: Da Funk by Daft Punk | 0:23:02 | 0:23:04 | |
It'll pay tribute to both the politics of Club Dada in Berlin | 0:23:04 | 0:23:07 | |
and the irreverence of New York Dada. | 0:23:07 | 0:23:09 | |
It's taking us to Bond Street, where war leaders | 0:23:13 | 0:23:17 | |
Churchill and Roosevelt hold court. | 0:23:17 | 0:23:19 | |
Let's see who gets arrested first. | 0:23:25 | 0:23:28 | |
Do you think I'll get arrested... I'm more likely to get arrested with balaclavas? | 0:23:28 | 0:23:31 | |
I think you'll get more arrested than me. THEY LAUGH | 0:23:31 | 0:23:35 | |
-Here are the boys. -Right, so, are you ready? -Yeah. | 0:23:35 | 0:23:38 | |
There's my Dadaist act for the day. | 0:23:46 | 0:23:49 | |
-That's great, don't you think? -Yeah. | 0:23:49 | 0:23:51 | |
It looks really menacing. | 0:23:51 | 0:23:53 | |
Shall we leave them on for a couple of minutes to see what people think? | 0:23:53 | 0:23:56 | |
'I think Cornelia's gone for political Dada - | 0:23:58 | 0:24:00 | |
'she's made them into terrorists.' | 0:24:00 | 0:24:02 | |
The police don't seem to have noticed yet. | 0:24:03 | 0:24:07 | |
'Right, now it's my turn to give these old geezers | 0:24:07 | 0:24:10 | |
'a 21st century face-lift. | 0:24:10 | 0:24:12 | |
'I'm thinking absurdo-Dada is more my style.' | 0:24:12 | 0:24:16 | |
MUSIC: I've Told Every Little Star by Linda Scott | 0:24:16 | 0:24:20 | |
'That should bring them down to scale.' | 0:24:20 | 0:24:21 | |
-There. -That's great, I love it. | 0:24:21 | 0:24:24 | |
These need you on, darling. | 0:24:24 | 0:24:26 | |
I think I'll go on here. | 0:24:26 | 0:24:28 | |
Oh! | 0:24:28 | 0:24:29 | |
-What does it mean then? -What does it mean? -What have we done? | 0:24:29 | 0:24:33 | |
Well, this is almost...well, it's 100 years after Dadaism, | 0:24:33 | 0:24:35 | |
-so this is... -Is it a student prank? | 0:24:35 | 0:24:37 | |
-I think it's a student prank... -It kind of feels like it. | 0:24:37 | 0:24:40 | |
It is a student prank, isn't it? | 0:24:40 | 0:24:42 | |
I liked your balaclavas, I think, best. | 0:24:42 | 0:24:44 | |
-Did you? -Yeah. It was more of a striking effect. | 0:24:44 | 0:24:48 | |
It was slightly more edgy. People enjoy this one more, I think. | 0:24:48 | 0:24:51 | |
-Mine was most probably a bit more like... -SIREN WAILS | 0:24:51 | 0:24:54 | |
..you know, like Pussy Riot or something. | 0:24:54 | 0:24:56 | |
-Do you think so? -Yes. | 0:24:56 | 0:24:58 | |
Here come the coppers. | 0:24:58 | 0:25:00 | |
-What should we do - just leave it there? -Well, we could. | 0:25:00 | 0:25:03 | |
Should we just walk off and leave it? | 0:25:03 | 0:25:05 | |
I suppose the whole legacy of Dada means that people | 0:25:11 | 0:25:14 | |
have been defacing statues for a long time, haven't they? | 0:25:14 | 0:25:17 | |
Usually the traffic cone is the favourite one. | 0:25:17 | 0:25:20 | |
Now you've got Banksy. | 0:25:20 | 0:25:22 | |
It's not just being cheeky. No. CORNELIA LAUGHS | 0:25:22 | 0:25:26 | |
No, it's a bit more, I don't know, | 0:25:26 | 0:25:28 | |
it came out of a more political time, didn't it? | 0:25:28 | 0:25:30 | |
For some reason I always thought Dadaism was | 0:25:30 | 0:25:33 | |
a little less benign than Surrealism. | 0:25:33 | 0:25:36 | |
'Well, that's its brilliance for me. | 0:25:38 | 0:25:40 | |
'Dada can be the provocative dangerous artform Cornelia is | 0:25:40 | 0:25:43 | |
'drawn to, but it's also the original inspiration for mindless | 0:25:43 | 0:25:46 | |
'student pranks.' | 0:25:46 | 0:25:49 | |
Back in Zurich, Tristan Tzara, who we last saw casting a tribal spell | 0:25:55 | 0:26:00 | |
at the Cabaret Voltaire, was taking Dada in a radical new direction. | 0:26:00 | 0:26:04 | |
With new publications springing up by the second, | 0:26:06 | 0:26:09 | |
Dada's next target was the world of mass communication. | 0:26:09 | 0:26:13 | |
Tzara planned to trick the papers with a fake press release. | 0:26:13 | 0:26:18 | |
Tzara was using Dada's subversive energy | 0:26:21 | 0:26:24 | |
to mock the new media culture. | 0:26:24 | 0:26:26 | |
NEWS JINGLE PLAYS | 0:26:26 | 0:26:29 | |
There was a pistol duel yesterday on the Rehalp near Zurich, between | 0:26:32 | 0:26:37 | |
Tristan Tzara, familiar founder of Dada, and Dada painter Hans Arp. | 0:26:37 | 0:26:41 | |
Four rounds were fired and, in the fourth exchange, | 0:26:41 | 0:26:44 | |
Arp was slightly grazed on his left thigh. | 0:26:44 | 0:26:47 | |
Armando Iannucci. | 0:26:49 | 0:26:51 | |
How do you respond to this? | 0:26:51 | 0:26:53 | |
-Well, this is literally news to me. -Yeah. | 0:26:53 | 0:26:55 | |
-I'm going to put the hands down. -Yeah, I'm going to stop doing this. | 0:26:55 | 0:26:58 | |
This was an article, | 0:26:58 | 0:27:00 | |
this was written by the Dadaists and sent out | 0:27:00 | 0:27:02 | |
to various publications and newspapers, and was printed. | 0:27:02 | 0:27:05 | |
It was all made up. It was fake. | 0:27:05 | 0:27:07 | |
And that is something that is very contemporary, | 0:27:07 | 0:27:10 | |
because nowadays, you know, there's so much, | 0:27:10 | 0:27:14 | |
you know, 24-hour media and newspapers that have websites | 0:27:14 | 0:27:17 | |
-that need filling, so if you sent them a press release now... -Yeah. | 0:27:17 | 0:27:21 | |
..it will appear as a story, even though it's word-for-word | 0:27:21 | 0:27:25 | |
quoting the press release that you sent out. | 0:27:25 | 0:27:27 | |
I mean, what Dada is saying is that something that sounds very | 0:27:27 | 0:27:31 | |
serious and true might not be serious and might not be true. | 0:27:31 | 0:27:35 | |
I remember, about 20 years ago, we did a show called On The Hour, which | 0:27:35 | 0:27:39 | |
was like a false news programme, but we actually did a...we made a report | 0:27:39 | 0:27:43 | |
about an abattoir where the cows were actually rising from the dead. | 0:27:43 | 0:27:47 | |
I remember it. | 0:27:47 | 0:27:49 | |
..and it nearly got on the Today programme. | 0:27:49 | 0:27:52 | |
We submitted it as from a Bristol reporter for BBC Bristol, | 0:27:52 | 0:27:56 | |
and it was all lined up, | 0:27:56 | 0:27:58 | |
and John Humphrys had written his introduction and everything, | 0:27:58 | 0:28:01 | |
and we came seconds away from it being played live. | 0:28:01 | 0:28:04 | |
Armando Iannucci has made an art out of Dadaist manipulation with | 0:28:04 | 0:28:08 | |
shows like The Day Today. | 0:28:08 | 0:28:11 | |
News. | 0:28:11 | 0:28:12 | |
London Transport say they may have to close the Underground | 0:28:12 | 0:28:15 | |
system due to an infestation of horses. | 0:28:15 | 0:28:17 | |
A report described the conditions in the equine plague as | 0:28:17 | 0:28:20 | |
"like an abattoir in a power cut". | 0:28:20 | 0:28:23 | |
To inspire other would-be Dadaists, Tristan Tzara published | 0:28:23 | 0:28:27 | |
a set of instructions on how to tear up newspaper articles and | 0:28:27 | 0:28:30 | |
reassemble them. | 0:28:30 | 0:28:32 | |
Take a newspaper. Take some scissors. | 0:28:33 | 0:28:36 | |
Choose from this paper an article. | 0:28:36 | 0:28:39 | |
Next, carefully cut out each of the words that make up this | 0:28:39 | 0:28:43 | |
article and put them all together in a bag. | 0:28:43 | 0:28:46 | |
Shake gently. | 0:28:46 | 0:28:48 | |
Next, take out each cutting, one after the other. | 0:28:48 | 0:28:52 | |
Copy conscientiously in the order in which they left the bag. | 0:28:52 | 0:28:56 | |
-OK. -Right, so tip it out. -Right. | 0:28:56 | 0:28:58 | |
So, let's... | 0:28:58 | 0:28:59 | |
This is the way they've fallen out. | 0:28:59 | 0:29:01 | |
"We're updating squeaky-voiced felt." | 0:29:01 | 0:29:04 | |
Hang on. | 0:29:05 | 0:29:06 | |
"The Cumberbatch appeared correct where cardboard catchphrases, | 0:29:06 | 0:29:11 | |
"occasionally sometimes correct," it says. | 0:29:11 | 0:29:15 | |
-Which kind of sums up random words. -Yeah. | 0:29:15 | 0:29:20 | |
I think what they were beginning to explore was that idea that, | 0:29:20 | 0:29:24 | |
you know, we take so much of what we're being told for granted. | 0:29:24 | 0:29:29 | |
We're seeing it as the voice of authority and infallible, | 0:29:29 | 0:29:33 | |
-and they're saying it's not, really. -Yeah. -It's just words. | 0:29:33 | 0:29:36 | |
Thank you, thank you. | 0:29:37 | 0:29:39 | |
We've been recording a music video, and it goes like this. | 0:29:39 | 0:29:43 | |
# I'm hardcore and I know the score | 0:29:43 | 0:29:45 | |
# I am disgusted by the poor | 0:29:45 | 0:29:47 | |
# And my chums matter more because we are the law | 0:29:47 | 0:29:50 | |
# And I've made sure we're ready for class war. # | 0:29:50 | 0:29:53 | |
Cut-up, today, is such a prevalent form. | 0:29:53 | 0:29:56 | |
Deconstructing what you think of as true and telling you it's just, | 0:29:56 | 0:30:01 | |
you know, it's just an assembly of information which you could | 0:30:01 | 0:30:06 | |
put out in another combination. | 0:30:06 | 0:30:08 | |
Any source of any information can be cut and connected... | 0:30:08 | 0:30:11 | |
-But this is a random combination. -Yeah. -That's the difference. | 0:30:11 | 0:30:15 | |
I think what's happening now is people are trying to do | 0:30:15 | 0:30:18 | |
something more coherent with it. | 0:30:18 | 0:30:20 | |
So this is Tristan Tzara's unpatented idea, | 0:30:20 | 0:30:24 | |
-but it's led to fridge magnet poetry. -Fridge magnet poetry. | 0:30:24 | 0:30:28 | |
And it's led to the whole of the internet, which consists | 0:30:28 | 0:30:30 | |
mostly of people cutting up bits of film and television. | 0:30:30 | 0:30:36 | |
The idea that we can all reedit - | 0:30:36 | 0:30:38 | |
one day this is how all programmes will be made. | 0:30:38 | 0:30:41 | |
That's great. Thank you.' | 0:30:43 | 0:30:45 | |
THEY CHUCKLE | 0:30:45 | 0:30:47 | |
DRAMATIC NEWS SHOW MUSIC | 0:30:47 | 0:30:49 | |
Dada poets and artists jumped on the creative opportunities | 0:30:51 | 0:30:54 | |
provided by cut-up, using the process for more than just satire. | 0:30:54 | 0:30:59 | |
Sometimes, a painting doesn't go the way you want it to go. | 0:30:59 | 0:31:04 | |
Damn you, fine artwork! | 0:31:04 | 0:31:06 | |
And this happened to artist Jean Arp, who was so frustrated, | 0:31:06 | 0:31:11 | |
he ripped up the painting and let the pieces land on the floor and | 0:31:11 | 0:31:17 | |
where they landed, he decided that | 0:31:17 | 0:31:21 | |
this was exactly what he wanted | 0:31:21 | 0:31:24 | |
in the first place. | 0:31:24 | 0:31:27 | |
That's not bad, actually. It's pretty good. | 0:31:30 | 0:31:33 | |
And Arp's wasn't too bad either. | 0:31:33 | 0:31:36 | |
Hello. Yes. Hello. Thank you. Yes. | 0:31:36 | 0:31:38 | |
This Dadaist principle of tearing everything up re-emerged in | 0:31:38 | 0:31:41 | |
'60s counter culture and nowhere more so than with | 0:31:41 | 0:31:45 | |
William Burroughs, who made an art out of chance happening with | 0:31:45 | 0:31:49 | |
his fragmented poetry, tape cut-ups, and even randomly reassembled films. | 0:31:49 | 0:31:55 | |
Hello. Yes. Where are we? Hello. Yes. | 0:31:55 | 0:31:58 | |
Hello. Yes. | 0:31:58 | 0:32:00 | |
Burroughs' artistic experiments would trigger | 0:32:00 | 0:32:03 | |
a new wave of cut-up in the second half of the century, passing on | 0:32:03 | 0:32:06 | |
his Dadaist technique to musicians, from Paul McCartney to David Bowie. | 0:32:06 | 0:32:11 | |
What I've used it for more than anything else is igniting | 0:32:12 | 0:32:17 | |
anything that might be in my imagination. | 0:32:17 | 0:32:20 | |
I've tried doing it with diaries and things and I was finding out | 0:32:20 | 0:32:23 | |
amazing things about me and what I'd done and where I was going. | 0:32:23 | 0:32:27 | |
And a lot of the things that I'd done, it seemed that it would | 0:32:27 | 0:32:30 | |
predict things about the future, or tell me a lot about the past. | 0:32:30 | 0:32:33 | |
I don't know, let's see what happens. | 0:32:33 | 0:32:35 | |
# I'm an alligator | 0:32:40 | 0:32:45 | |
# I'm a momma-papa... # | 0:32:45 | 0:32:47 | |
From our pop stars to our counter cultural heroes, | 0:32:47 | 0:32:50 | |
we're all a little bit under the influence of Dada. | 0:32:50 | 0:32:53 | |
In 1919, the Dada epidemic hit Cologne. | 0:32:54 | 0:32:58 | |
Each time it spread, Dada mutated and evolved. | 0:32:58 | 0:33:01 | |
Zurich Dada had introduced absurdist nonsense, Berlin Dada had targeted | 0:33:03 | 0:33:09 | |
the political establishment, and New York Dadaists sent up the art world. | 0:33:09 | 0:33:14 | |
Now, in Cologne, it was all about shock for shock's sake. | 0:33:14 | 0:33:18 | |
A Cologne publication called the Berlin Dadaists | 0:33:18 | 0:33:21 | |
counterfeits of Dada for their strongly held beliefs. | 0:33:21 | 0:33:26 | |
It claimed, they can neither shit nor pee without ideologies. | 0:33:26 | 0:33:30 | |
What Cologne Dada lacked in politics, it made up for in anarchy. | 0:33:32 | 0:33:37 | |
The Dada early spring exhibition incensed audiences with an | 0:33:39 | 0:33:42 | |
entrance via a public urinal of a beer hall and on the way in, | 0:33:42 | 0:33:46 | |
the public were showered with obscenities. | 0:33:46 | 0:33:50 | |
BLEEP. BLEEP. BLEEP. | 0:33:50 | 0:33:52 | |
Audiences were so incensed that they destroyed artworks in fits of rage. | 0:33:52 | 0:33:57 | |
And Max Ernst, the leader of Cologne Dada, actively encouraged | 0:33:57 | 0:34:01 | |
this destruction, displaying a sculpture with an axe attached. | 0:34:01 | 0:34:06 | |
The police said, "Enough is enough!" and closed down the show. | 0:34:06 | 0:34:09 | |
To find out what all this anarchy and destruction was about, | 0:34:14 | 0:34:17 | |
I'm going to meet Michael Landy, | 0:34:17 | 0:34:20 | |
one of the mischievous Young British Artists who introduced | 0:34:20 | 0:34:24 | |
Dada's shock tactics to a new generation in the '90s. | 0:34:24 | 0:34:27 | |
Michael is best known for destroying all of his possessions | 0:34:33 | 0:34:36 | |
in the name of art. | 0:34:36 | 0:34:38 | |
Hello? | 0:34:38 | 0:34:39 | |
And judging by the look of his house, | 0:34:39 | 0:34:42 | |
he hasn't replaced many of them since. | 0:34:42 | 0:34:44 | |
DRAMATIC WESTERN STYLE MUSIC | 0:34:46 | 0:34:48 | |
In Cologne, Max Ernst had a wooden sculpture with an axe | 0:34:57 | 0:35:02 | |
attached to it, so that they could destroy it. | 0:35:02 | 0:35:04 | |
-Oh, yeah. -What do you know about that? | 0:35:04 | 0:35:06 | |
Destruction in art has kind of, like, a long history, really. | 0:35:06 | 0:35:10 | |
And I think Dada was like, it brought, like, destruction... | 0:35:10 | 0:35:15 | |
It's not necessarily nihilistic, it can also be creative. | 0:35:15 | 0:35:19 | |
Yeah. | 0:35:19 | 0:35:20 | |
Picasso talks about having, like, every time you make a painting, | 0:35:20 | 0:35:23 | |
in a sense, it's a kind of mini-destruction. | 0:35:23 | 0:35:25 | |
You know, you've got to take things apart to recreate, in a sense. | 0:35:25 | 0:35:30 | |
You've got to take the previous generation apart, in a sense. | 0:35:30 | 0:35:34 | |
You've got to almost, like, dismiss what they do and kind of | 0:35:34 | 0:35:38 | |
recreate yourself with a whole new set of values. | 0:35:38 | 0:35:41 | |
Cos you did your destruction... | 0:35:41 | 0:35:43 | |
Yeah, I destroyed all my worldly belongings, yeah. | 0:35:43 | 0:35:46 | |
-Was it absolutely everything? -At the time, yeah, at the age of 37. | 0:35:46 | 0:35:50 | |
And how did you destroy it? | 0:35:50 | 0:35:51 | |
We didn't get an axe to it or anything like that. | 0:35:51 | 0:35:54 | |
It was actually a quite methodical way of doing it. | 0:35:54 | 0:35:56 | |
So did you destroy your artwork as well? | 0:35:56 | 0:35:58 | |
Yeah, I destroyed my artwork, I destroyed my friends' artwork. | 0:35:58 | 0:36:02 | |
So would you say that was a Dadaist thing to do? | 0:36:02 | 0:36:05 | |
Yeah, in some respects, yeah. | 0:36:05 | 0:36:07 | |
I would say it's a pretty absurd thing to do. | 0:36:07 | 0:36:09 | |
Yeah, and it did get up people's noses because obviously | 0:36:09 | 0:36:12 | |
-people work their whole lives to acquire things, don't they? -Yeah. | 0:36:12 | 0:36:15 | |
And there I was, destroying them all. | 0:36:15 | 0:36:18 | |
Michael Landy and his mates shocked the art world in the | 0:36:18 | 0:36:22 | |
'90s with the notorious Sensation exhibition. | 0:36:22 | 0:36:26 | |
There was Damien Hirst with his shark, | 0:36:26 | 0:36:30 | |
Tracey Emin with her unmade bed, | 0:36:30 | 0:36:33 | |
and Marcus Harvey with his portrait of serial killer Myra Hindley, | 0:36:33 | 0:36:37 | |
made with child handprints. | 0:36:37 | 0:36:39 | |
But while Cologne Dada had its show shut down by the police, | 0:36:39 | 0:36:43 | |
the YBA's just provoked a few headlines in the tabloids. | 0:36:43 | 0:36:46 | |
You were involved in the Sensation show, weren't you? | 0:36:49 | 0:36:52 | |
Hands up, I was, yeah. | 0:36:52 | 0:36:54 | |
I mean, Sensation is like a collection of Charles Saatchi's. | 0:36:54 | 0:36:58 | |
I mean, Dada is like... | 0:36:58 | 0:37:01 | |
They're a group of artists who create manifestos, you know. | 0:37:01 | 0:37:05 | |
They have like shared ideologies. | 0:37:05 | 0:37:07 | |
I think the only similarity would be the media. | 0:37:07 | 0:37:11 | |
Dada was being more provocative than I am and their audience is | 0:37:11 | 0:37:15 | |
very conservative. I mean, what people think of art is like | 0:37:15 | 0:37:18 | |
a nice landscape painting or a nice cherub in bronze. | 0:37:18 | 0:37:22 | |
They don't think, you know, | 0:37:22 | 0:37:23 | |
a mannequin with a light bulb on its head is art. | 0:37:23 | 0:37:26 | |
-Yeah. -So they're trying to shock people, aren't they? -Yeah, they are. | 0:37:26 | 0:37:29 | |
That's what they're trying to... Get up their noses and make them angry. | 0:37:29 | 0:37:32 | |
Yeah. So, any final thoughts on Dada? | 0:37:32 | 0:37:37 | |
I'd just like to thank Dada really for paving the way for people | 0:37:37 | 0:37:40 | |
like me to come along. | 0:37:40 | 0:37:42 | |
-Yeah. Thank you, Dada. -Thank you, Dada. | 0:37:42 | 0:37:46 | |
HE CHUCKLES | 0:37:46 | 0:37:48 | |
I've brought a piece of artwork along with me for you. | 0:37:48 | 0:37:52 | |
-Do you know the history of me and artwork? -I know, yeah. | 0:37:52 | 0:37:55 | |
It's one of my prized possessions. | 0:37:55 | 0:37:57 | |
-Well, now, you're making me feel bad. You can take it home. -No. | 0:37:57 | 0:38:00 | |
No, I want you to do what you've got to do with it. | 0:38:00 | 0:38:03 | |
I could make you do it. I'd feel much better. | 0:38:03 | 0:38:05 | |
-You can follow my instructions. -Have you got any ideas? | 0:38:05 | 0:38:07 | |
-Maybe show it to me first. -So I'll go and get the plate. -OK. | 0:38:07 | 0:38:11 | |
And then we'll talk about how to destroy. | 0:38:11 | 0:38:13 | |
-How we're going to get rid of it. -Yeah, here it is. -Aw. | 0:38:13 | 0:38:16 | |
It's a wedding plate for Bill and Cath. | 0:38:16 | 0:38:19 | |
William and you know...the royals. | 0:38:19 | 0:38:22 | |
So the classic way, | 0:38:24 | 0:38:25 | |
I suppose of destroying it is the Grecian way, isn't it? | 0:38:25 | 0:38:28 | |
-I like the idea of poking it off something. -OK. | 0:38:28 | 0:38:31 | |
You could poke it off the top of my head. | 0:38:31 | 0:38:33 | |
-We could balance on top of my head and you could push it off. -Yeah. | 0:38:33 | 0:38:36 | |
-You know where your broom... -I've got a flat head. I'll go and get the broom. | 0:38:36 | 0:38:40 | |
-OK, I'll try and balance on my head. -Yeah. Right, are you ready? | 0:38:47 | 0:38:50 | |
LOUD CLATTER | 0:38:53 | 0:38:56 | |
-Did that break? -Yeah. | 0:38:56 | 0:38:57 | |
There. | 0:38:57 | 0:38:58 | |
-That looks nice now, I like that. -Yeah, that looks nice. | 0:38:58 | 0:39:01 | |
-Yeah, I like that as well. -I could sellotape that back together. | 0:39:01 | 0:39:04 | |
-Are you going to sweep that up and put it in a poitrine? -In a latrine? | 0:39:04 | 0:39:07 | |
-In a poitrine, yeah. Not a latrine. -Put a cloche over it. | 0:39:07 | 0:39:11 | |
-A what? -A cloche. | 0:39:11 | 0:39:13 | |
THEY CHUCKLE | 0:39:13 | 0:39:16 | |
'When I do silly things in my comedy, | 0:39:16 | 0:39:18 | |
'it's a bit of throwaway fun, | 0:39:18 | 0:39:19 | |
'but when I do them with an esteemed Young British Artist, I am | 0:39:19 | 0:39:23 | |
'surely creating a piece of Dadaist performance art!' | 0:39:23 | 0:39:26 | |
You find me, several tenths of my way through this journey and | 0:39:26 | 0:39:30 | |
exploration into what is Dada. | 0:39:30 | 0:39:33 | |
I've spoken to several people, | 0:39:33 | 0:39:35 | |
all of which seem to have varying ideas about Dada. | 0:39:35 | 0:39:39 | |
Was it political, anarchic? Was it comedy? What was it? | 0:39:39 | 0:39:42 | |
It was probably all of those things and more. | 0:39:42 | 0:39:45 | |
But what I can say is since the beginning, | 0:39:45 | 0:39:47 | |
I thought I had quite a good idea about what Dada is. | 0:39:47 | 0:39:50 | |
I think I'm probably more confused now, | 0:39:50 | 0:39:53 | |
so I shall continue my journey and find out what exactly is Dada. | 0:39:53 | 0:39:58 | |
SQUEALING | 0:40:00 | 0:40:01 | |
UM! | 0:40:02 | 0:40:04 | |
To help me answer that question, I'm meeting the man who updated | 0:40:05 | 0:40:08 | |
Dada's absurdist style for my generation. | 0:40:08 | 0:40:12 | |
FANFARE | 0:40:15 | 0:40:16 | |
Now, where is he? | 0:40:18 | 0:40:21 | |
FANFARE | 0:40:21 | 0:40:23 | |
-Strangers meeting in the night. -I never expected to see you here. -No. | 0:40:26 | 0:40:30 | |
-Take a seat. -What are you doing here? -I don't know. | 0:40:30 | 0:40:32 | |
-What are you doing here? -I don't know. A car brought me. | 0:40:32 | 0:40:35 | |
I know nothing! | 0:40:35 | 0:40:36 | |
Let's find out! | 0:40:36 | 0:40:38 | |
Well, Terry, what does Dada mean to you, if anything? | 0:40:38 | 0:40:42 | |
I've never seriously thought about what it means to me. It just is. | 0:40:44 | 0:40:49 | |
-Do you know what it is? -Yeah. I do. | 0:40:49 | 0:40:51 | |
I think what was interesting, the fact that it was anti-war, | 0:40:51 | 0:40:56 | |
it was a reaction to the First World War, | 0:40:56 | 0:40:58 | |
a reaction to bourgeois society, and these very boring tastes. | 0:40:58 | 0:41:04 | |
I think the anger is what's interesting about it, | 0:41:04 | 0:41:07 | |
how they were angry about the world nightmare they were living in | 0:41:07 | 0:41:10 | |
and yet, you deal with it in different ways. | 0:41:10 | 0:41:14 | |
And it's the humour side that we always went for. | 0:41:14 | 0:41:17 | |
Is that what it was? Was there a war going on, | 0:41:17 | 0:41:19 | |
so we're going to have to have fun and lighten the situation? | 0:41:19 | 0:41:23 | |
Or you go absurd. You go totally Absurdist. | 0:41:23 | 0:41:26 | |
If we're in an absurd situation, a complete nightmare out there, | 0:41:26 | 0:41:30 | |
well, let's create nightmares and throw it back at society and | 0:41:30 | 0:41:33 | |
see if you can shake it up. | 0:41:33 | 0:41:35 | |
-That's a really good point cos it really was just madness. -Yeah. | 0:41:35 | 0:41:39 | |
I mean, I left America because of the Vietnam War and all of | 0:41:39 | 0:41:43 | |
that and I realised I was more... | 0:41:43 | 0:41:45 | |
I was more Dadaist than I realised | 0:41:45 | 0:41:49 | |
because completely against the war, I hated the way society was | 0:41:49 | 0:41:53 | |
structured and behaving, and I wanted to make people laugh. | 0:41:53 | 0:41:57 | |
-Yeah. -Bah-boom! | 0:41:57 | 0:41:59 | |
MUMBLING SINGING WAGNER | 0:41:59 | 0:42:01 | |
BLESSING IN LATIN | 0:42:04 | 0:42:06 | |
What interests me is how many artists that I've always been | 0:42:11 | 0:42:15 | |
either copying, admiring, or being influenced by, | 0:42:15 | 0:42:19 | |
were the Dadaists, and George Melly wrote a review of Python and | 0:42:19 | 0:42:24 | |
he referred to me as a product of Max Ernst. Wow! | 0:42:24 | 0:42:31 | |
-So you weren't aware before...? -I was only aware of his paintings. | 0:42:31 | 0:42:35 | |
I wasn't aware of his collages. | 0:42:35 | 0:42:38 | |
This is a film by Hans Richter, who was a Dadaist. | 0:42:44 | 0:42:47 | |
Look at this. | 0:42:47 | 0:42:49 | |
It's called Ghosts Before Breakfast. | 0:42:49 | 0:42:51 | |
-The silly walk! -It is, look. That's it. Isn't it? -Yup! | 0:42:58 | 0:43:01 | |
So, who saw that then? | 0:43:01 | 0:43:03 | |
-Probably nobody. -Is it just a coincidence? | 0:43:03 | 0:43:06 | |
But that's what I love about things, how coincidental things can be. | 0:43:06 | 0:43:11 | |
-Yeah. -We were just doing it. We weren't aware of what we were doing. | 0:43:11 | 0:43:14 | |
There's a bubbling pot, isn't there? Where Dadaists pop out like | 0:43:14 | 0:43:18 | |
bubbles and they're not aware that they are being called Dadaists! | 0:43:18 | 0:43:22 | |
Yeah. I know. | 0:43:22 | 0:43:24 | |
I think it was easier when we were doing Python, certainly for me, | 0:43:24 | 0:43:28 | |
coming to this country, the categories are more clear. | 0:43:28 | 0:43:33 | |
You know, the bankers, City guys, pin stripe suits, | 0:43:33 | 0:43:36 | |
bowler hats, working class, look like working class, | 0:43:36 | 0:43:39 | |
the middle class was the middle class. | 0:43:39 | 0:43:41 | |
Now, I think it's harder to be Dadaist right now. | 0:43:41 | 0:43:45 | |
Maybe it's ripe for a new uprising of Dadaism. | 0:43:45 | 0:43:48 | |
I think it's really hard to get to grips with cos you can't find | 0:43:48 | 0:43:52 | |
what the enemy is. | 0:43:52 | 0:43:54 | |
You can't react against it cos it's so atomised now. | 0:43:54 | 0:43:58 | |
SWANEE WHISTLE | 0:43:58 | 0:44:01 | |
In the early '20s, with the war over, | 0:44:08 | 0:44:10 | |
the global outposts of Dada converged in Paris. | 0:44:10 | 0:44:14 | |
First, Tristan Tzara from Zurich, | 0:44:15 | 0:44:18 | |
then Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray from New York... | 0:44:18 | 0:44:21 | |
Oi, Marcel! | 0:44:21 | 0:44:23 | |
..and then, Max Ernst from Cologne. | 0:44:23 | 0:44:27 | |
A new supergroup was formed. | 0:44:29 | 0:44:31 | |
Paris Dada offered its groupies more spectacle and more sheer | 0:44:35 | 0:44:38 | |
silliness than anything that had gone before. | 0:44:38 | 0:44:42 | |
It was Dada with bells on. | 0:44:42 | 0:44:45 | |
BELLS SHAKE | 0:44:45 | 0:44:46 | |
HE HUMS FLORAL DANCE | 0:44:47 | 0:44:49 | |
By way of self-promotion, | 0:44:54 | 0:44:56 | |
the Dadaists plastered stickers across the city. | 0:44:56 | 0:44:59 | |
BELL RINGS AND DROWNS OUT SPEECH | 0:45:03 | 0:45:08 | |
Francis Picabia made a drawing on a blackboard and then erased it | 0:45:20 | 0:45:26 | |
at the exhibition. | 0:45:26 | 0:45:28 | |
And to announce the opening of a Man Ray exhibition, | 0:45:30 | 0:45:35 | |
the space was filled | 0:45:35 | 0:45:37 | |
with balloons and the Dadaists popped them as people came in. | 0:45:37 | 0:45:40 | |
Paris audiences were so outraged, | 0:45:41 | 0:45:45 | |
they threw tomatoes and raw meat at them. | 0:45:45 | 0:45:48 | |
Now, I'm meeting an artist who knows exactly how it feels to be on | 0:45:48 | 0:45:52 | |
the receiving end of groceries. | 0:45:52 | 0:45:55 | |
Martin Creed's Turner Prize-winning show, | 0:45:55 | 0:45:57 | |
The Lights Going On And Off, which consisted of the lights going | 0:45:57 | 0:46:01 | |
on and off, invited the question - is this art? | 0:46:01 | 0:46:04 | |
And prompted some gallery goers to throw eggs at the wall. | 0:46:04 | 0:46:09 | |
-So this is your studio? -Yeah. -Well, show us around? -Well, so there's... | 0:46:09 | 0:46:14 | |
-These are paintings. -Oh, yeah. I've heard about them. | 0:46:14 | 0:46:18 | |
-That's a bag. -Yeah. -That's a bag, that says... | 0:46:18 | 0:46:21 | |
That actually says "whatever". | 0:46:21 | 0:46:24 | |
-Oh, yeah. -There's some boxes here. -Yeah. | 0:46:25 | 0:46:29 | |
-What's this? -A knitting thing with the stripes getting bigger. | 0:46:29 | 0:46:33 | |
-What's it going to be? -No, that is what it is. | 0:46:33 | 0:46:36 | |
-Oh, is it? -This is a pair of trousers | 0:46:36 | 0:46:39 | |
I've been working on. | 0:46:39 | 0:46:40 | |
-What are you going to do with them? -Well, just erm... | 0:46:40 | 0:46:44 | |
-..wear them. -JIM CHUCKLES | 0:46:45 | 0:46:49 | |
-Wow! -That is a hat. | 0:46:49 | 0:46:52 | |
-How does it look? -Looks good. | 0:46:52 | 0:46:53 | |
Aye. | 0:46:53 | 0:46:55 | |
-What is that? -That's a Panda. A Fiat Panda. | 0:46:56 | 0:46:59 | |
So what about Dada? | 0:47:02 | 0:47:04 | |
You got anything that's Dadaesque in here? | 0:47:04 | 0:47:06 | |
Er, I don't, well, I don't know about, I don't know, | 0:47:06 | 0:47:09 | |
-maybe a lot of it is because I think it's sort of a bit stupid. -Yeah. | 0:47:09 | 0:47:17 | |
You know? I think that's... | 0:47:17 | 0:47:18 | |
-That's what Dada is. -Aye, like being stupid. | 0:47:18 | 0:47:21 | |
But there's political meaning and then you've got to balance that | 0:47:21 | 0:47:24 | |
-with the daftness or the stupidness. -Right, aye. | 0:47:24 | 0:47:27 | |
Cos I'd probably fall on the daft side. | 0:47:27 | 0:47:29 | |
I would go...I think I would definitely fall on the stupid side. | 0:47:29 | 0:47:33 | |
You'd be even further, right the other end! | 0:47:33 | 0:47:36 | |
-Yeah. -Yeah. | 0:47:36 | 0:47:38 | |
Cos I think it's like more, you know, | 0:47:38 | 0:47:42 | |
-it's more like life, cos life's stupid. -Yeah. | 0:47:42 | 0:47:45 | |
'Like the Dadaists, Martin filled the gallery half full with balloons. | 0:47:47 | 0:47:51 | |
'His works are starting to feel rather familiar.' | 0:47:51 | 0:47:54 | |
-That was your idea, wasn't it? Balloons. -I didn't know about that. | 0:47:54 | 0:47:58 | |
This is what I've been finding, | 0:47:58 | 0:48:01 | |
the Dadaists did have a lot of ideas for the first time. | 0:48:01 | 0:48:05 | |
-Yeah, it looks like it, aye. -And, um... | 0:48:05 | 0:48:08 | |
-and then you had them later. -Right! | 0:48:08 | 0:48:10 | |
THEY LAUGH | 0:48:10 | 0:48:13 | |
I'm just wandering about here. | 0:48:13 | 0:48:15 | |
I mean, who knows what they were really trying to do, those people? | 0:48:15 | 0:48:18 | |
-I don't know. -I don't know. | 0:48:18 | 0:48:21 | |
No, I don't. | 0:48:21 | 0:48:22 | |
And I don't know either, but, aye, I don't know. | 0:48:24 | 0:48:28 | |
-I don't know. -I don't know. | 0:48:28 | 0:48:30 | |
Well, there we are then, that's the answer to that, isn't it? | 0:48:30 | 0:48:33 | |
Is there any reason behind any of your stuff? | 0:48:35 | 0:48:38 | |
Maybe it's trying to do what you're not supposed to do. | 0:48:38 | 0:48:41 | |
When I did this film of people being sick, | 0:48:41 | 0:48:43 | |
and one of people shitting as well, | 0:48:43 | 0:48:46 | |
just cos it's a taboo of our, like, British society. | 0:48:46 | 0:48:53 | |
And are you allowed to go into a gallery and laugh your head off. | 0:48:53 | 0:48:58 | |
Yeah, well, I would have thought so, aye. | 0:48:58 | 0:49:00 | |
-That's what I encourage whenever I have my shows. -Aye. | 0:49:00 | 0:49:03 | |
'Martin's invited me to join him in his latest nonsensical idea, | 0:49:07 | 0:49:12 | |
'blind painting. | 0:49:12 | 0:49:14 | |
'So I'm going to do a portrait with absolutely no idea | 0:49:14 | 0:49:17 | |
'what it's going to look like.' | 0:49:17 | 0:49:19 | |
-It is weird, isn't it? -It is weird. | 0:49:20 | 0:49:23 | |
-I think I'm done. -Yeah, I think I have. | 0:49:51 | 0:49:53 | |
-Right. -So we're going to... | 0:49:53 | 0:49:55 | |
-What are we going to do, just show? -Oh, aye, OK. | 0:49:55 | 0:49:58 | |
Whoa! | 0:49:58 | 0:50:00 | |
Oh, yeah. | 0:50:00 | 0:50:01 | |
THEY LAUGH | 0:50:01 | 0:50:03 | |
-Oh, God. -Oh, it's dripping. | 0:50:06 | 0:50:08 | |
Put them down on here. | 0:50:08 | 0:50:09 | |
Aye. Don't want it to drip. Amazing. | 0:50:09 | 0:50:13 | |
So has this got anything to do with Dada? | 0:50:15 | 0:50:17 | |
I suppose it's just a new idea. | 0:50:17 | 0:50:19 | |
Maybe cos it's like trying to do it the way you're not | 0:50:19 | 0:50:21 | |
supposed to do it, cos you find that if you're going to do | 0:50:21 | 0:50:23 | |
-a picture of something you should... -So it's getting rid of | 0:50:23 | 0:50:25 | |
-all conventions. -..at least look at what your... | 0:50:25 | 0:50:28 | |
I feel like, you know, if you try to control things | 0:50:28 | 0:50:31 | |
-it doesn't necessarily make them better, you know? -Yeah. | 0:50:31 | 0:50:34 | |
This has got no bearing on anything. | 0:50:34 | 0:50:35 | |
In Paris Tristan Tzara achieved his dream by gathering together | 0:50:50 | 0:50:54 | |
all the Dadaists to form a movement, Movement Dada. | 0:50:54 | 0:50:59 | |
It was the culmination of all the nonsense of Dada, | 0:50:59 | 0:51:02 | |
and for a brief moment Dada was the talk of the town. | 0:51:02 | 0:51:06 | |
But for some, like Max Ernst and Man Ray, the nonsense was wearing thin. | 0:51:08 | 0:51:13 | |
They'd begun searching for meaning through dreams and the subconscious. | 0:51:13 | 0:51:18 | |
Man Ray famously took a metronome, cut out an eye from a photograph, | 0:51:19 | 0:51:23 | |
put them together and made a new work, Object To Be Destroyed. | 0:51:23 | 0:51:28 | |
I think I might have a go myself. | 0:51:28 | 0:51:30 | |
Connect and print. Is that what I do? | 0:51:33 | 0:51:36 | |
Enter the password. | 0:51:36 | 0:51:38 | |
Shove a little bit of light music on. | 0:51:38 | 0:51:40 | |
MUSIC: Left Bank Two by The Noveltones | 0:51:41 | 0:51:45 | |
There is something blurry happening. | 0:51:49 | 0:51:51 | |
Then you cut out an eye. | 0:51:53 | 0:51:57 | |
And then he stuck the eye on the metronome | 0:52:00 | 0:52:04 | |
and there... | 0:52:04 | 0:52:07 | |
he had a new work, | 0:52:07 | 0:52:09 | |
Object To Be Destroyed. | 0:52:09 | 0:52:12 | |
So with all the Dadaists all going off in different directions | 0:52:21 | 0:52:25 | |
there was nothing holding this movement together | 0:52:25 | 0:52:28 | |
and, what's more, egos were taking over. | 0:52:28 | 0:52:31 | |
So Tristan Tzara, right, he wanted to be the leader of the Dadaists. | 0:52:32 | 0:52:36 | |
"Oh, look at me, I want to be the king of the Dadaists!" | 0:52:36 | 0:52:39 | |
In fact they used to call him Tzar Tristan. | 0:52:39 | 0:52:42 | |
But soon Dada had rivals in the Paris art world, | 0:52:42 | 0:52:46 | |
including the French poet Andre Breton, and he was | 0:52:46 | 0:52:49 | |
getting up the noses of other poets as well, like Paul Eluard. | 0:52:49 | 0:52:52 | |
Dada was about to reach its bitter end in July 1923 | 0:52:52 | 0:52:57 | |
at the Soiree Of The Bearded Heart. | 0:52:57 | 0:53:01 | |
So early on in the evening, Andre Breton takes offence at some | 0:53:02 | 0:53:06 | |
performer and whacks him with his cane and gets thrown out, then | 0:53:06 | 0:53:10 | |
a bit later on, just before Tristan Tzara's play The Gas Heart | 0:53:10 | 0:53:14 | |
is on, there's like a rumpus going on in the stalls. | 0:53:14 | 0:53:18 | |
Then who is it? | 0:53:18 | 0:53:20 | |
It's Paul Eluard, the poet. He demands to see Tristan Tzara, | 0:53:20 | 0:53:23 | |
so Tristan Tzara comes out, they have a pushing and shoving match | 0:53:23 | 0:53:26 | |
and then Paul Eluard lamps Tristan Tzara, | 0:53:26 | 0:53:30 | |
he goes down and that was it, you know, it was kind of all over | 0:53:30 | 0:53:33 | |
by then really, so we went off to the boozer to talk about it, | 0:53:33 | 0:53:36 | |
and had a right old laugh. | 0:53:36 | 0:53:38 | |
Dada had died a death. | 0:53:38 | 0:53:41 | |
But some Dadaists, like Max Ernst and Man Ray, | 0:53:41 | 0:53:44 | |
found another gang to join, | 0:53:44 | 0:53:46 | |
jumping ship to Andre Breton's new art movement, | 0:53:46 | 0:53:50 | |
Surrealism. | 0:53:50 | 0:53:52 | |
But I don't know if anyone really, really and honestly knew | 0:53:53 | 0:53:56 | |
what Dada was all about yet. | 0:53:56 | 0:53:59 | |
And to be honest, neither do I. | 0:53:59 | 0:54:02 | |
But perhaps if I look out on this historic city, | 0:54:03 | 0:54:07 | |
take in its atmosphere, I might get a feel for Dada | 0:54:07 | 0:54:12 | |
and finally get to grips with this contradictory movement. | 0:54:12 | 0:54:20 | |
No, Paris didn't do much for Dadaism, | 0:54:21 | 0:54:24 | |
and, to be honest, it's not doing a lot for me either. | 0:54:24 | 0:54:27 | |
I'm off. | 0:54:27 | 0:54:28 | |
Terry! Terry! | 0:54:34 | 0:54:36 | |
What is... What is Dada? | 0:54:38 | 0:54:40 | |
Come on, what is Dada? | 0:54:40 | 0:54:42 | |
-Leave me alone! Leave me alone! -What is it? | 0:54:42 | 0:54:45 | |
-What is Dada? -I'm not going to tell him, I'm not going to tell him. | 0:54:46 | 0:54:49 | |
What is Dada? | 0:54:51 | 0:54:54 | |
Everyone needs a shed to go to when all else has failed. | 0:54:56 | 0:54:59 | |
What is Dada? | 0:55:00 | 0:55:02 | |
What is Dada? What...is Dada? | 0:55:02 | 0:55:06 | |
-VOICE ECHOES: -Eh, what do you reckon? | 0:55:06 | 0:55:08 | |
Turkey. Tutankhamen. | 0:55:08 | 0:55:11 | |
-Hello. -What? | 0:55:11 | 0:55:14 | |
Moon River, wider than a mile. | 0:55:14 | 0:55:18 | |
Hello. | 0:55:18 | 0:55:19 | |
Hello. | 0:55:19 | 0:55:21 | |
Yes, Arthur Smith at your service here. | 0:55:21 | 0:55:23 | |
What exactly is Dada? | 0:55:23 | 0:55:26 | |
Dada is a virgin microbe that fills up all the space | 0:55:26 | 0:55:31 | |
that reason cannot with its convention. | 0:55:31 | 0:55:35 | |
Good, glad you sorted that out for me, then. | 0:55:35 | 0:55:37 | |
Yeah, I mean, in a sense, you know, | 0:55:37 | 0:55:39 | |
if you start trying to analyse it then you'll end up | 0:55:39 | 0:55:42 | |
disappearing up your own bottom, and it recognises that. | 0:55:42 | 0:55:45 | |
So some people reckon is political, some people think it's just | 0:55:45 | 0:55:50 | |
stupid absurdist comedy, or is it all of it? What is it? | 0:55:50 | 0:55:54 | |
You've got to defy convention and logic in order to amaze | 0:55:54 | 0:55:59 | |
and stimulate people, I suppose. | 0:55:59 | 0:56:03 | |
Dada gave a licence for people to be stupid and in some sense | 0:56:03 | 0:56:06 | |
it is the founder of modern comedy and you've definitely acted on | 0:56:06 | 0:56:11 | |
your licence to be stupid, and Vic and all your mates, so well done. | 0:56:11 | 0:56:18 | |
Thanks. | 0:56:18 | 0:56:19 | |
Well, I'm stuck here alone in my bar, | 0:56:19 | 0:56:21 | |
and you're stuck there alone in your bar, | 0:56:21 | 0:56:24 | |
and yet we're together, Jim, that's a kind of Dadaism all by itself. | 0:56:24 | 0:56:28 | |
That's beautiful. | 0:56:28 | 0:56:30 | |
'Right, where do I go from here?' | 0:56:30 | 0:56:34 | |
We're nearly at the end of our voyage, and have we discovered anything? | 0:56:42 | 0:56:46 | |
Yes, I think we have. I think we know a little bit more about Dada. | 0:56:46 | 0:56:49 | |
Do you know more about Dada? Do I know more about Dada? | 0:56:49 | 0:56:52 | |
I do, but do you? | 0:56:52 | 0:56:55 | |
I don't and you do. | 0:56:55 | 0:56:57 | |
And I think one thing that we have learned is that a bloke | 0:56:57 | 0:57:01 | |
from the BBC, that's me, sitting on a pedestal, | 0:57:01 | 0:57:03 | |
can't tell you what to think. | 0:57:03 | 0:57:05 | |
They'll put it all together in the edit anyway. | 0:57:05 | 0:57:08 | |
Dada is... | 0:57:08 | 0:57:09 | |
-Completely... -Maverick... | 0:57:09 | 0:57:11 | |
-Deconstructing... -This serious idea about... | 0:57:11 | 0:57:14 | |
-Art... -It's just an assembly... | 0:57:14 | 0:57:17 | |
-Of artists who create... -Art that was... -Incredibly modern... | 0:57:17 | 0:57:19 | |
-Very... -Coincidental... | 0:57:19 | 0:57:21 | |
-Free-form... -Negligence... | 0:57:21 | 0:57:23 | |
-They were a bit stupid... -And want to make people laugh... | 0:57:23 | 0:57:26 | |
-The spirit of Dada... -Was about... | 0:57:26 | 0:57:28 | |
-A whole new set of... -Extraordinary... -Ideologies... | 0:57:28 | 0:57:31 | |
-They were angry about... -Convention and... | 0:57:31 | 0:57:33 | |
-People being sick... -It's like a big political... | 0:57:33 | 0:57:36 | |
-Shake it up. -I would say it's pretty absurd... | 0:57:36 | 0:57:38 | |
-It just is... -More like life... | 0:57:38 | 0:57:41 | |
-Nonsensical anyway... -More provocative... | 0:57:41 | 0:57:43 | |
-Than beer and sausages... -I'm sure it's something like that. | 0:57:43 | 0:57:46 | |
Thank you. | 0:58:15 | 0:58:17 | |
LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE | 0:58:17 | 0:58:19 |