Tristan Tzara citations
Tristan Tzara
Date de naissance: 16. avril 1896
Date de décès: 25. décembre 1963
Tristan Tzara, de son vrai nom Samuel Rosenstock, né le 16 avril 1896 à Moinești en Roumanie, et mort le 24 décembre 1963 dans le 7e arrondissement de Paris, est un écrivain, poète et essayiste de langues roumaine et française et l'un des fondateurs du mouvement Dada dont il sera par la suite le chef de file. Wikipedia
Citations Tristan Tzara
Tristan Tzara commente ici le dernier roman de Reverdy.
Citations autres, Pierre Reverdy : Le Voleur de Talan, 1917
Citations autres, Notes sur Guillaume Apollinaire, 1917
Cette citation provient d'une revue dirigée par André Breton.
Citations autres, Pierre Reverdy : Le Voleur de Talan, 1917, Tristan Tzara, Atrocités d'Arthur et Trompette et Scaphandrier, 1919
1910s, Dada Manifesto', 1918
Contexte: Dada; knowledge of all the means rejected up until now... Dada; abolition of logic, which is the dance of those impotent to create: Dada; of every social hierarchy and equation set up for the sake of values by our valets: Dada; every object, all objects, sentiments, obscurities, apparitions and the precise clash of parallel lines are weapons for the fight: Dada; abolition of memory: Dada; abolition of archaeology: Dada; abolition of prophets: Dada; abolition of the future: Dada; absolute and unquestionable faith in every god that is the immediate product of spontaneity:* Dada; elegant and unprejudiced leap from a harmony to the other sphere... Freedom: Dada Dada Dada, a roaring of tense colors, and interlacing of opposites and of all contradictions, grotesques, inconsistencies: LIFE.
„Always destroy what is in you.“
Source: Oeuvres Completes
1920s, Lecture on Dada', 1922
1910s, Dada Manifesto', 1918
As quoted in The Dada Almanac: Berlin 1920, (1983) ed. Richard Huelsenbeck, transl. Malcolm Green, p.127
1920s
1920s, Lecture on Dada', 1922
1920s, Lecture on Dada', 1922
1910s, Dada Manifesto', 1918
1920s
Source: 'Dada Manifesto On Feeble Love And Bitter Love', Intro of part II, by Tristan Tzara, 12th December 1920
As quoted in Dada Art and Anti-art, Hand Richter, Thames & Hudson, London & New York, 2004
Tzara's reaction when in 1921 w:Picabia, Man Ray and Marcel Duchamp jokingly asked to grant them permission to use the name 'Dada' as their own name for Dada in New York.
1920s
1920s, Lecture on Dada', 1922
1920s, Lecture on Dada', 1922
Quote of Tzara's poem from 1920; as cited in Cambridge Introduction to Modernism, ed. Pericles Lewis (Cambridge UP, 2007), p. 107 - online: https://modernism.research.yale.edu/wiki/index.php/To_Make_a_Dadaist_Poem
1920s
1910s, Dada Manifesto', 1918
1920s, Lecture on Dada', 1922