Dada
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Dada
Summary
Dada is an art movement[1]. Dada ranks in the top 0.6% of art_movement entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (11,251 views/month, #2 of 334).[2]
Key Facts
- Dada was influenced by Ubu roi[3].
- Dada was influenced by Parade[4].
- Dada was influenced by cubism[5].
- Dada was influenced by Expressionism[6].
- Dada was influenced by anti-war movement[7].
- Dada was influenced by African art[8].
- Dada's instance of is recorded as art movement[9].
- Dada's instance of is recorded as literary movement[10].
- Dada's instance of is recorded as cultural movement[11].
- Dada's instance of is recorded as art style[12].
- Dada was followed by surrealism[13].
- Dada is a type of avant-garde[14].
- Dada's Commons category is recorded as Dada[15].
- 1910 marks the founding of Dada[16].
- Dada's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Dada[17].
- Dada's described at URL is recorded as https://www.oxfordartonline.com/page/dada-and-surrealism[18].
- Dada's described at URL is recorded as https://pubs.lib.uiowa.edu/dadasur/article/id/31897/[19].
- Dada's described at URL is recorded as https://www.thecollector.com/whats-the-difference-between-dadaism-and-surrealism/[20].
- Dada's described at URL is recorded as https://assets.moma.org/documents/moma_catalogue_2823_300061909.pdf[21].
- Dada's described at URL is recorded as https://library.achievingthedream.org/sacartappreciation/chapter/video-marcel-duchamp-fountain-1917/[22].
- Dada's topic's main Wikimedia portal is recorded as Portal:Dada and Surrealism[23].
- Dada's described by source is recorded as Dresdner Hefte[24].
- Dada's described by source is recorded as Basque Literature Terms Dictionary[25].
- Dada's partially coincident with is recorded as anti-art[26].
- Dada's has contributing factor is recorded as World War I[27].
Body
Definition and Type
Recorded instance of include art movement[9], literary movement[10], cultural movement[11], and art style[12]. Dada is a type of avant-garde[14].
Origins
1910 marks the founding of Dada[16].
Movements and Schools
Acknowledged influences include Ubu roi[3], a literary work[28], written by Alfred Jarry[29]; Parade[4], a ballet[30]; cubism[5], an art movement[31], in France[32], founded in 1907[33]; Expressionism[6], an art movement[34]; anti-war movement[7]; and African art[8], an art of an area[35].
Why It Matters
Dada ranks in the top 0.6% of art_movement entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (11,251 views/month, #2 of 334).[2] Dada has Wikipedia articles in 29 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[36] Dada is known by 17 alternative names across languages and contexts.[37]
Dada has been cited as an influence by surrealism[38], an art movement[39], founded in 1920[40]; De Stijl[41], an art group[42], in Netherlands[43], founded in 1917[44], headquartered in Leiden[45]; pop art[46], an art movement[47], founded in 1950[48]; Nouveau réalisme[49], an art movement[50], founded in 1960[51]; Neo-Dada[52], an art movement[53]; and Lettrism[54], an art movement[55], founded in 1945[56].
FAQs
Who did Dada influence?
Dada has been cited as an influence by surrealism[38], De Stijl[41], pop art[46], and Nouveau réalisme[49].