Torben Jelsbak

Torben Jelsbak

dada coPenhaGen torben Jelsbak current research on dadaism as an international movement or net- work does not account for any dada enclave or any dadaist activities in the nordic countries (cf. forster ed. 1996-2002). the absence of any explicit nordic dada group or dadaist magazine should not, however, lead to the conclusion that the dadaist rupture passed con- temporary nordic artists and activists unnoticed. this essay shows, on the contrary, that dadaist practices and tactics did play an impor- tant, though neglected, role in the emergence of danish avant-garde culture in the years around 1920. during World War i, copenhagen enjoyed a brief status as a scandinavian cultural metropolis – a “nordic Paris”. not unlike Zürich, the capital of neutral switzerland and the birthplace of in- ternational dada, copenhagen served as a meeting point for nordic artists and foreign artists in exile and as a melting pot for the latest trends in european avant-garde art. isolated from the events of war and revolution occurring elsewhere in europe, copenhagen became the centre of a vivid modernist rupture in the arts, made manifest in a series of controversial exhibitions, publications, and the emergence of a local avant-garde group affiliated with the magazine Klingen (the Blade) (1917-1920). Labelled “expressionism”, an already am- biguous term, the activities of these artists incorporated elements and impulses from french fauvism and cubism, italian futurism, and international dadaism. an initial problem, therefore, when approaching the danish his- tory of dada concerns terminology. the danish artists and activists who may be associated with the dada movement or who were in- volved in dadaist activities did not (or only rarely) designate them- 402 Torben Jelsbak selves as dadaists. instead, “expressionism” was used as the over- arching and non-discriminative umbrella term for any modernist or avant-garde activity, “dadaism” being generally regarded as a degen- erate and rather insane offshoot of the new art. the Berlin expres- sionist impresario and editor of Der Sturm, herwarth Walden, explained to one of his danish correspondents in 1919: “dadaism is basically expressionism misunderstood” (“dadaismus ist einfach missverstandener expression ismus”).1 the editor and leading theo- rist of the Klingen-circle, otto Gelsted (1888-1968), also felt the need to draw this distinction in his pamphlet Ekspressionisme (Expres- sionism) from 1919. in Gelsted’s formalist interpretation of the ex- pressionist rupture in the arts, cubism was praised as the ‘rational’ and permanent part, whereas dada was mentioned so as to indicate the pitfalls and dangers of the new poetics: allegedly, a new artistic movement, dadaism, has emerged in switzer- land, for the time being le dernier cri in art proclaiming all previous movements to be meaningless because of their search for meaning. existence is surely meaningless; in any case no one until now has been able to show much meaning in it. therefore it is humbug when artists induce people to believe that there is a point when there is none. art must also be meaningless – when the world is a chaos, art shall not be a microcosmos. in this there is a bitter truth the argu- ment is insane but consistent. (Gelsted 1977: 75) danish avant-gardists were, however, more familiar with the activi- ties of the international dada movement(s) than this statement sug- gests. even in the context of Klingen, we find examples of more experimental and genre-breaking activities (performance, simultane- ous poetry, montage) that clearly transcend Gelsted’s formalist or cubist conception of expressionism and, instead, point to the influ- ence of both Zürich and Berlin dadaism. in the second wave of dan- ish expressionism, which was linked to the communist dnss (new student society) (1922-24), this dada element became even more ex- plicit, indicating the group’s close contacts to the Berlin dada move- ment and herwarth Walden’s der sturm-organisation. another problem of narrating this history – which is a general problem and paradox in any dadaist historiography – lies in the per- ishable character of its empirical objects and sources. the danish.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    2 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us