From Dada to Data
We're presenting The Opera this week in a Film and Video Umbrella curated symposium at the Whitechapel Gallery, London.
As an adjunct to the Hannah Höch exhibition at Whitechapel Art Gallery, this symposium gathers together artists, writers and critics to consider the impact of Dada and its continuing legacy. Born out of a rage at the consumerist conformity of the early 20th century, is Dada’s unruly, contrarian spirit as powerful (and as sorely needed) one hundred years on? Do the sharp wit and the pointed polemics of Dada’s cut-and-paste aesthetic still cut to the quick, or has over-familiarity (and co-option by the mainstream) blunted their critical edge? Does digital technology offer new avenues for (and new definitions of) creative collage, and new opportunities to disrupt and destabilise, or will the rise of Big Data crowd out, and snuff out, the maverick impulse toward provocation and spontaneity?
"From Dada-to-Data brings together artists and thinkers including writer and historian Esther Leslie, cultural critic Paul Morley, and artists George Barber, Thomson & Craighead and Nick Crowe & Ian Rawlinson and researcher Kay Tabernacle"
22 February 2014
Whitechapel Gallery, London
As an adjunct to the Hannah Höch exhibition at Whitechapel Art Gallery, this symposium gathers together artists, writers and critics to consider the impact of Dada and its continuing legacy. Born out of a rage at the consumerist conformity of the early 20th century, is Dada’s unruly, contrarian spirit as powerful (and as sorely needed) one hundred years on? Do the sharp wit and the pointed polemics of Dada’s cut-and-paste aesthetic still cut to the quick, or has over-familiarity (and co-option by the mainstream) blunted their critical edge? Does digital technology offer new avenues for (and new definitions of) creative collage, and new opportunities to disrupt and destabilise, or will the rise of Big Data crowd out, and snuff out, the maverick impulse toward provocation and spontaneity?
"From Dada-to-Data brings together artists and thinkers including writer and historian Esther Leslie, cultural critic Paul Morley, and artists George Barber, Thomson & Craighead and Nick Crowe & Ian Rawlinson and researcher Kay Tabernacle"
22 February 2014
Whitechapel Gallery, London