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Dada and the absurd: pedagogies of art and survival.

Douglas, Anne

Authors



Contributors

Tim Ingold
Editor

Abstract

In the early 1970s Allan Kaprow, artist, theorist and educator, wrote three essays entitled The Education of the Un-artist I, II and III. From the late 1950s Kaprow had been instrumental in the development of what he called 'Happenings' and was part of the Fluxus movement, which had taken up the mantle of Dada. With his Happenings, Kaprow suggested that artists should open up to life beyond the art establishment. Kaprow began as an art historian and became an avant-garde artist. The push and pull between a relatively secure sense of the past from the history of art and a volatile present was rooted in Kaprow's personal experience. He was writing at the height of the Vietnam War and the Protest Movement in the United States. As both an artist and an educator, his concept of educating the un-artist points to a refusal to be trapped in past knowledge while using this history as leverage to move forward, to act in the chaos of the fast-changing life that surrounded him.

Citation

DOUGLAS, A. 2022. Dada and the absurd: pedagogies of art and survival. In T. Ingold (Ed.), Knowing from the inside: cross-disciplinary experiments with matters of pedagogy. London: Bloomsbury Academic [online], chapter 9, pages 189-211. Available from: https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350217171.ch-009

Online Publication Date Feb 21, 2022
Publication Date Mar 24, 2022
Deposit Date May 24, 2024
Publicly Available Date May 24, 2024
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Pages 189-212
Book Title Knowing from the inside: cross-disciplinary experiments with matters of pedagogy
Chapter Number 9
ISBN 9781350217140
DOI https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350217171.ch-009
Keywords Dada; Fluxus movement; Avant-garde artist; Pedagogies; Cultures in crisis; Art education; Postmodern academy
Public URL https://rgu-repository.worktribe.com/output/2023554

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