DADA Manifesto
Hugo Ball
Dada is a new tendency in art. One can tell this from the fact that
until now nobody knew anything about it, and tomorrow everyone in Zurich
will be talking about it. Dada comes from the dictionary. It is
terribly simple. In French it means "hobby horse". In German it means
"good-bye", "Get off my back", "Be seeing you sometime". In Romanian:
"Yes, indeed, you are right, that's it. But of course, yes, definitely,
right". And so forth.
An International word. Just a word, and the word a movement. Very
easy to understand. Quite terribly simple. To make of it an artistic
tendency must mean that one is anticipating complications. Dada
psychology, dada Germany cum indigestion and fog paroxysm, dada
literature, dada bourgeoisie, and yourselves, honoured poets, who are
always writing with words but never writing the word itself, who are
always writing around the actual point. Dada world war without end, dada
revolution without beginning, dada, you friends and also-poets,
esteemed sirs, manufacturers, and evangelists. Dada Tzara, dada
Huelsenbeck, dada m'dada, dada m'dada dada mhm, dada dera dada, dada
Hue, dada Tza.
How does one achieve eternal bliss? By saying dada. How does one
become famous? By saying dada. With a noble gesture and delicate
propriety. Till one goes crazy. Till one loses consciousness. How can
one get rid of everything that smacks of journalism, worms, everything
nice and right, blinkered, moralistic, europeanised, enervated? By
saying dada. Dada is the world soul, dada is the pawnshop. Dada is the
world's best lily-milk soap. Dada Mr Rubiner, dada Mr Korrodi. Dada Mr
Anastasius Lilienstein. In plain language: the hospitality of the Swiss
is something to be profoundly appreciated. And in questions of
aesthetics the key is quality.
I shall be reading poems that are meant to dispense with conventional
language, no less, and to have done with it. Dada Johann Fuchsgang
Goethe. Dada Stendhal. Dada Dalai Lama, Buddha, Bible, and Nietzsche.
Dada m'dada. Dada mhm dada da. It's a question of connections, and of
loosening them up a bit to start with. I don't want words that other
people have invented. All the words are other people's inventions. I
want my own stuff, my own rhythm, and vowels and consonants too,
matching the rhythm and all my own. If this pulsation is seven yards
long, I want words for it that are seven yards long. Mr Schulz's words
are only two and a half centimetres long.
It will serve to show how articulated language comes into being. I
let the vowels fool around. I let the vowels quite simply occur, as a
cat meows . . . Words emerge, shoulders of words, legs, arms, hands of
words. Au, oi, uh. One shouldn't let too many words out. A line of
poetry is a chance to get rid of all the filth that clings to this
accursed language, as if put there by stockbrokers' hands, hands worn
smooth by coins. I want the word where it ends and begins. Dada is the
heart of words.
Each thing has its word, but the word has become a thing by itself.
Why shouldn't I find it? Why can't a tree be called Pluplusch, and
Pluplubasch when it has been raining? The word, the word, the word
outside your domain, your stuffiness, this laughable impotence, your
stupendous smugness, outside all the parrotry of your self-evident
limitedness. The word, gentlemen, is a public concern of the first
importance.
Tristan Tzara
The magic of a word - DADA - which for journalists has opened the
door to an unforeseen world, has for us not the slightest importance.
To launch a manifesto you have to want: A.B. & C., and fulminate against 1, 2, & 3,
work yourself up and sharpen your wings to conquer and circulate
lower and upper case As, Bs & Cs, sign, shout, swear, organise prose
into a form that is absolutely and irrefutably obvious, prove its ne
plus ultra and maintain that novelty resembles life in the same way as
the latest apparition of a harlot proves the essence of God. His
existence had already been proved by the accordion, the landscape and
soft words. * To impose one's A.B.C. is only natural - and therefore
regrettable. Everyone does it in the form of a crystalbluff-madonna, or a
monetary system, or pharmaceutical preparations, a naked leg being the
invitation to an ardent and sterile Spring. The love of novelty is a
pleasant sort of cross, it's evidence of a naive don't-give-a-damn
attitude, a passing, positive, sign without rhyme or reason. But this
need is out of date, too. By giving art the impetus of supreme
simplicity - novelty - we are being human and true in relation to
innocent pleasures; impulsive and vibrant in order to crucify boredom.
At the lighted crossroads, alert, attentive, lying in wait for years, in
the forest. * I am writing a manifesto and there's nothing I want, and
yet I'm saying certain things, and in principle I am against manifestos,
as I am against principles (quantifying measures of the moral value of
every phrase - too easy; approximation was invested by the
impressionists). *
I'm writing this manifesto to show that you can perform contrary
actions at the same time, in one single, fresh breath; I am against
action; as for continual contradiction, and affirmation too, I am
neither for nor against them, and I won't explain myself because I hate
common sense.
DADA - this is a word that throws up ideas so that they can be
shot down; every bourgeois is a little playwright, who invents different
subjects and who, instead of situating suitable characters on the level
of his own intelligence, like chrysalises on chairs, tries to find
causes or objects (according to whichever psychoanalytic method he
practices) to give weight to his plot, a talking and self-defining
story. *
Every spectator is a plotter, if he tries to explain a word (to
know!) From his padded refuge of serpentine complications, he allows his
instincts to be manipulated. Whence the sorrows of conjugal life.
To be plain: The amusement of redbellies in the mills of empty skulls.
image of a hand pointing to the right DADA DOES NOT MEAN ANYTHING
If we consider it futile, and if we don't waste our time over a
word that doesn't mean anything... The first thought that comes to these
minds is of a bacteriological order: at least to discover its
etymological, historical or psychological meaning. We read in the papers
that the negroes of the Kroo race call the tail of a sacred cow: DADA. A
cube, and a mother, in a certain region of Italy, are called: DADA. The
word for a hobby horse, a children's nurse, a double affirmative in
Russian and Romanian, is also: DADA. Some learned journalists see it as
an art for babies, other Jesuscallingthelittlechildrenuntohim saints see
it as a return to an unemotional and noisy primitivism - noise and
monotonous. A sensitivity cannot be built on the basis of a word; every
sort of construction converges into a boring sort of perfection, a
stagnant idea of a golden swamp, a relative human product. A work of art
shouldn't be beauty per se, because it is dead; neither gay nor sad,
neither light nor dark; it is to rejoice or maltreat individualities to
serve them up the cakes of sainted haloes or the sweat of a meandering
chase through the atmosphere. A work of art is never beautiful, by
decree, objectively, for everyone. Criticism is, therefore, useless; it
only exists subjectively, for every individual, and without the
slightest general characteristic. Do people imagine they have found the
psychic basis common to all humanity? The attempt of Jesus, and the
Bible, conceal, under their ample, benevolent wings: shit, animals and
days. How can anyone hope to order the chaos that constitutes that
infinite, formless variation: man? The principle: "Love thy neighbour"
is hypocrisy. "Know thyself" is utopian, but more acceptable because it
includes malice. No pity. After the carnage we are left with the hope of
a purified humanity. I always speak about myself because I don't want
to convince, and I have no right to drag others in my wake, I'm not
compelling anyone to follow me, because everyone makes his art in his
own way, if he knows anything about the joy that rises like an arrow up
to the astral strata, or that which descends into the mines stewn with
the flowers of corpses and fertile spasms. Stalactites: look everywhere
for them, in creches magnified by pain, eyes as white as angels' hares.
Thus DADA was born* , out of a need for independence, out of mistrust
for the community. People who join us keep their freedom. We don't
accept any theories. We've had enough of the cubist and futurist
academies: laboratories of formal ideas. Do we make art in order to earn
money and keep the dear bourgeoisie happy? Rhymes have the smack of
money, and inflexion slides along the line of the stomach in profile.
Every group of artists has ended up at this bank, straddling various
comets. Leaving the door open to the possibility of wallowing in comfort
and food.
Here we are dropping our anchor in fertile ground.
Here we really know what we are talking about, because we have
experienced the trembling and the awakening. Drunk with energy, we are
revenants thrusting the trident into heedless flesh. We are streams of
curses in the tropical abundance of vertiginous
a line image of a squiggle consisting of overlapping curves and zigazags
vegetation, resin and rain is our sweat, we bleed and burn with thirst, our blood is strength.
Cubism was born out of a simple manner of looking at objects:
Cezanne painted a cup twenty centimetres lower than his eyes, the
cubists look at it from above, others complicate it appearance by
cutting a vertical section through it and soberly placing it to one side
(I'm not forgetting the creators, nor the seminal reasons of unformed
matter that they rendered definitive). * The futurist sees the same cup
in movement, a succession of objects side by side, mischievously
embellished by a few guide-lines. This doesn't stop the canvas being
either a good or a bad painting destined to form an investment for
intellectual capital. The new painter creates a world whose elements are
also its means, a sober, definitive, irrefutable work. The new artist
protests: he no longer paints (symbolic and illusionistic reproduction)
but creates directly in stone, wood, iron, tin, rocks, or locomotive
structures capable of being spun in all directions by the limpid wind of
the momentary sensation. * Every pictorial or plastic work is
unnecessary , even if it is a monster which terrifies servile minds, and
not a sickly-sweet object to adorn the refectories of animals in human
garb, those illustrations of the sad fable of humanity. - A painting is
the art of making two lines, which have been geometrically observed to
be parallel, meet on a canvas, before our eyes, in the reality of a
world that has been transposed according to new conditions and
possibilities. This world is neither specified nor defined in the work,
it belongs, in its innumerable variations, to the spectator. For its
creator it has neither case nor theory. Order = disorder; ego = non-ego;
affirmation - negation: the supreme radiations of an absolute art.
Absolute in the purity of its cosmic and regulated chaos, eternal in
that globule that is a second which has no duration, no breath, no light
and no control. * I appreciate an old work for its novelty. It is only
contrast that links us to the past. * Writers who like to moralise and
discuss or ameliorate psychological bases have, apart from a secret wish
to win, a ridiculous knowledge of life, which they may have classified,
parcelled out, canalised; they are determined to see its categories
dance when they beat time. Their readers laugh derisively, but carry on:
what's the use?
There is one kind of literature which never reaches the voracious
masses. The work of creative writers, written out of the author's real
necessity, and for his own benefit. The awareness of a supreme egoism,
wherein laws become significant. * Every page should explode, either
because of its profound gravity, or its vortex, vertigo, newness,
eternity, or because of its staggering absurdity, the enthusiasm of its
principles, or its typography. On the one hand there is a world
tottering in its flight, linked to the resounding tinkle of the infernal
gamut; on the other hand, there are: the new men. Uncouth, galloping,
riding astride on hiccups. And there is a mutilated world and literary
medicasters in desperate need of amelioration.
I assure you: there is no beginning, and we are not afraid; we
aren't sentimental. We are like a raging wind that rips up the clothes
of clouds and prayers, we are preparing the great spectacle of disaster,
conflagration and decomposition. Preparing to put an end to mourning,
and to replace tears by sirens spreading from one continent to another.
Clarions of intense joy, bereft of that poisonous sadness. * DADA is the
mark of abstraction; publicity and business are also poetic elements.
I destroy the drawers of the brain, and those of social
organisation: to sow demoralisation everywhere, and throw heaven's hand
into hell, hell's eyes into heaven, to reinstate the fertile wheel of a
universal circus in the Powers of reality, and the fantasy of every
individual.
A philosophical questions: from which angle to start looking at life, god, ideas,
or anything else. Everything we look at is false. I don't think the relative result
is any more important than the choice of patisserie or cherries for dessert. The way
people have of looking hurriedly at things from the opposite point of view, so as to
impose their opinions indirectly, is called dialectic, in other words,
heads I win and tails you lose, dressed up to look scholarly.
If I shout:
Ideal, Ideal, Ideal
Knowledge, Knowledge, Knowledge
Boomboom, Boomboom, Boomboom
I have recorded fairly accurately Progress, Law, Morals, and all
the other magnificent qualities that various very intelligent people
have discussed in so many books in order, finally, to say that even so
everyone has danced according to his own personal boomboom, and that
he's right about his boomboom: the satisfaction of unhealthy curiosity;
private bell-ringing for inexplicable needs; bath; pecuniary
difficulties; a stomach with repercussions on to life; the authority of
the mystical baton formulated as the grand finale of a phantom orchestra
with mute bows, lubricated by philtres with a basis of animal ammonia.
With the blue monocle of an angel they have dug out its interior for
twenty sous worth of unanimous gratitude. * If all of them are right,
and if all pills are only Pink, let's try for once not to be right. *
People think they can explain rationally, by means of thought, what they
write. But it's very relative. Thought is a fine thing for philosophy,
but it's relative. Psychoanalysis is a dangerous disease, it deadens
man's anti-real inclinations and systematises the bourgeoisie. There is
no ultimate Truth. Dialectics is an amusing machine that leads us (in
banal fashion) to the opinions which we would have held in any case. Do
people really think that, by the meticulous subtlety of logic, they have
demonstrated the truth and established the accuracy of their opinions?
Even if logic were confined by the senses it would still be an organic
disease. To this element, philosophers like to add: The power of
observation. But this magnificent quality of the mind is precisely the
proof of its impotence. People observe, they look at things from one or
several points of view, they choose them from amongst the millions that
exist. Experience too is the result of chance and of individual
abilities. * Science revolts me when it becomes a speculative system and
loses its utilitarian character - which is so useless - but is at least
individual. I hate slimy objectivity, and harmony, the science that
considers that everything is always in order. Carry on, children,
humanity ... Science says that we are nature's servants: everything is
in order, make both love and war. Carry on, children, humanity, nice
kind bourgeois and virgin journalists... * I am against systems; the
most acceptable system is that of have none on no principle. * To
complete oneself, to perfect oneself in one's own pettiness to the point
of filling the little vase of oneself with oneself, even the courage to
fight for and against thought, all this can suddenly infernally propel
us into the mystery of daily bread and the lilies of the economic field.
DADAIST SPONTANEITY
What I call the I-don't-give-a-damn attitude of life is when
everyone minds his own business, at the same time as he knows how to
respect other individualities, and even how to stand up for himself, the
two-step becoming a national anthem, a junk shop, the wireless (the
wire-less telephone) transmitting Bach fugues, illuminated
advertisements for placards for brothels, the organ broadcasting
carnations for God, all this at the same time, and in real terms,
replacing photography and unilateral catechism.
Active simplicity.
The incapacity to distinguish between degrees of light: licking
the twilight and floating in the huge mouth filled with honey and
excrement. Measured against the scale of Eternity, every action is vain -
(if we allow thought to have an adventure whose result would be
infinitely grotesque - an important factor in the awareness of human
incapacity). But if life is a bad joke, with neither goal nor initial
accouchement, and because we believe we ought, like clean
chrysanthemums, to make the best of a bad bargain, we have declared that
the only basis of understanding is: art. It hasn't the importance that
we, old hands at the spiritual, have been lavishing on it for centuries.
Art does nobody any harm, and those who are capable of taking an
interest in it will not only receive caresses, but also a marvellous
chance to people the country of their conversation. Art is a private
thing, the artist makes it for himself; a comprehensible work is the
product of a journalist, and because at this moment I enjoy mixing this
monster in oil paints: a paper tube imitating the metal that you press
and automatically squeeze out hatred, cowardice and villainy. The
artist, or the poet, rejoices in the venom of this mass condensed into
one shopwalker of this trade, he is glad to be insulted, it proves his
immutability. The author or the artist praised by the papers observes
that his work has been understood: a miserable lining to a collaborating
with the heat of an animal incubating the baser instincts. Flabby,
insipid flesh multiplying itself with the aid of typographical microbes.
We have done violence to the snivelling tendencies in our
natures. Every infiltration of this sort is macerated diarrhoea. To
encourage this sort of art is to digest it. What we need are strong
straightforward, precise works which will be forever misunderstood.
Logic is a complication. Logic is always false. It draws the superficial
threads of concepts and words towards illusory conclusions and centres.
Its chains kill, an enormous myriapod that asphyxiates independence. If
it were married to logic, art would be living in incest, engulfing,
swallowing its own tail, which still belongs to its body, fornicating in
itself, and temperament would become a nightmare tarred and feathered
with protestantism, a monument, a mass of heavy, greyish intestines.
But suppleness, enthusiasm and even the joy of injustice, that
little truth that we practise as innocents and that makes us beautiful:
we are cunning, and our fingers are malleable and glide like the
line image of loops with a few "x"s along their length
branches of that insidious and almost liquid plant; this
injustice is the indication of our soul, say the cynics. This is also a
point of view; but all flowers aren't saints, luckily, and what is
divine in us is the awakening of anti-human action. What we are talking
about here is a paper flower for the buttonhole of gentlemen who
frequent the ball of masked life, the kitchen of grace, our white, lithe
or fleshy girl cousins. They make a profit out of what we have
selected. The contradiction and unity of opposing poles at the same time
may be true. IF we are absolutely determined to utter this platitude,
the appendix of alibidinous, evil-smelling morality. Morals have an
atrophying effect, like every other pestilential product of the
intelligence. Being governed by morals and logic has made it impossible
for us to be anything other than impassive towards policemen - the cause
of slavery - putrid rats with whom the bourgeois are fed up to the
teeth, and who have infected the only corridors of clear and clean glass
that remained open to artists.
Every man must shout: there is great destructive, negative work
to be done. To sweep, to clean. The cleanliness of the individual
materialises after we've gone through folly, the aggressive, complete
folly of a world left in the hands of bandits who have demolished and
destroyed the centuries. With neither aim nor plan, without
organisation: uncontrollable folly, decomposition. Those who are strong
in word or in strength will survive, because they are quick to defend
themselves; the agility of their limbs and feelings flames on their
faceted flanks.
Morals have given rise to charity and pity, two dumplings that
have grown like elephants, planets, which people call good. There is
nothing good about them. Goodness is lucid, clear and resolute, and
ruthless towards compromise and politics. Morality infuses chocolate
into every man's veins. This task is not ordained by a supernatural
force, but by a trust of ideas-merchants and academic monopolists.
Sentimentality: seeing a group of bored and quarrelling men, they
invented the calendar and wisdom as a remedy. By sticking labels on to
things, the battle of the philosophers we let loose (money-grubbing,
mean and meticulous weights and measures) and one understood once again
that pity is a feeling, like diarrhoea in relation to disgust, that
undermines health, the filthy carrion job of jeopardising the sun. I
proclaim the opposition of all the cosmic faculties to that blennorrhoea
of a putrid sun that issues from the factories of philosophical
thought, the fight to the death, with all the resources of
DADAIST DISGUST
Every product of disgust that is capable of becoming a negation
of the family is dada; DADA; acquaintance with all the means hitherto
rejected by the sexual prudishness of easy compromise and good manners:
DADA; abolition of logic, dance of those who are incapable of creation:
DADA; every hierarchy and social equation established for values by our
valets: DADA; every object, all objects, feelings and obscurities, every
apparition and the precise shock of parallel lines, are means for the
battle of: DADA; the abolition of memory: DADA; the abolition of
archaeology: DADA the abolition of prophets: DADA; the abolition of the
future: DADA; the absolute and indiscutable belief in every god that is
an immediate product of spontaneity: DADA; the elegant and unprejudiced
leap from on harmony to another sphere; the trajectory of a word, a cry,
thrown into the air like an acoustic disc; to respect all
individualities in their folly of the moment, whether serious, fearful,
timid, ardent, vigorous, decided or enthusiastic; to strip one's church
of every useless and unwieldy accessory; to spew out like a luminous
cascade any offensive or loving thought, or to cherish it - with the
lively satisfaction that it's all precisely the same thing - with the
same intensity in the bush, which is free of insects for the
blue-blooded, and gilded with the bodies of archangels, with one's soul.
Liberty: DADA DADA DADA; - the roar of contorted pains, the
interweaving of contraries and all contradictions, freaks and
irrelevancies: LIFE.
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