Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Education : Talking about Dada movement with Sophie Taeuber-Arp & her art





Sophie Tauber-Arp
© Stiftung Arp Ev, Berlin / Rolandswerth
Courtesy The Estate and Hauser & Wirth


Swiss painter, sculptress, dancer and textile artist who took French nationality. The daughter of a German father and Swiss-German mother, Sophie Taeuber grew up in an environment in which art and culture were part of daily life.

Gracing the face of every Swiss 50 franc bill is the straightforward gaze of a dark-eyed woman. Behind this serious portrait lies one of Switzerland's most colorful artists: Sophie Taeuber-Arp, whose 127th birthday Google celebrates today with an artistic Doodle.





Sophie Tauber-Arp
Google Doodle 127th anniversary
Doodler: Mark Holmes
  • Google Doodle:

Once again Google the search engine and its doodler team is honoring women in Arts. The last one was the Brazilian Lygia Clark on the 23 October 2015. And I can't forget the French Niki de Saint Phalle on the 29 October 2014.

Today, 19 January 2016 the Swiss artist Sophie Taeuber-Arp, one of the foremost figures in the rebellious Dada art movement, has had her 127th birthday honoured with a Doodle.






Sophie Taeuber-Arp


The Swiss artist Sophie Taeuber-Arp is the latest individual to receive a special Google Doodle celebrating her life and work.

"This was an especially fun doodle because Sophie Taeuber-Arp was such a prolific and diverse artist. I almost couldn’t make up my mind which of her works to draw inspiration from, and I just wanted to keep going. Hopefully in the end, I was able to capture the spirit of at least one aspect of her work, and help draw a few more eyeballs to her many contributions to the arts."

Artist:   Mark Holmes




Composition of Circles and Overlapping Angles, 1930

Sophie Taeuber-Arp

Sophie Taeuber-Arp was a leading figure in Zürich and Paris Dada. Taeuber-Arp pushed the limits of abstraction in paintings, sculpture, and textiles. She also danced and designed sets for Dada performances. 

She was known as one of the foremost artists of geometric abstraction - which forms the style of today's Doodle.

Her work is like dance music – liberating and joyful. Abstract art is often said to originate in the heavily spiritualist ideas of artists like Wassily Kandinsky (my post on 16 December 2014) and Piet Mondrian. Yet Sophie Taeuber-Arp invented, along with Hans Arp, a different kind of abstraction that accepts chance and roots itself in the physical rather than spiritual world. It is like a utopian game.
So why is she important? She showed that abstract art was child’s play.


Sophie Taeuber-Arp

  • Some information:
Born in Davos, Switzerland in 1889 as Sophie Henriette Gertrude Taeuber, Taeuber-Arp is now recognized as one of the key figures in the Dada artistic movement, though in her lifetime she fought for her less figurative style of art to be recognized as fine art.



Comppaition, 1931

Sophie Taeuber-Arp


Born in Davos, Switzerland, Taeuber-Arp left home at eighteen to study textile design in Munich. Returning to Zurich in 1915, she began to produce non-representational paintings, which she referred to as “concrete” paintings. The paintings were influenced by her training in textile design, as well as Cubism. 



Sophie Tauber-Arp, 1918

Taeuber-Arp was a Swiss artist, designer, architect and dancer. Notably, she’s one of the most important artists of geometric abstraction – her minimalistic style, which is reflected in her textile artwork, marionettes, interiors, drawings, paintings, reliefs and sculptures, makes her distinguished amongst other artists of the early 20th century. 
Together with her husband, Dadaist artist Hans Arp, she permanently moved to France in the late 1920’s.



Artist Maker: Robert Bonfils, 1925
Her participation in the International Exposition of Modern Industrial and Decorative Arts took her to Paris in 1925 where the couple, who would obtain French nationality the following year, frequented the Surrealists.
From 1916–1928, Taeuber-Arp taught textile design at the Zurich School of Arts and Crafts. Taeuber-Arp was active in Zurich’s Dada group between 1916 and 1919; she danced in avant-garde performances at the Cabaret Voltaire, an important center of Dada activity.



Hans Arp and Sophie Taeuber-Arp, Ascona, 1925 
© Archiv Fondation Arp, Clamart,
photographer: unknown, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2019
At the same time, she met Jean ArpFrench sculptor, painter and collagist in 1922. The pair famously created vast, abstract multimedia works under the umbrella Duo Collages.
After World War I, many of Taeuber-Arp’s friends and colleagues moved to Paris. She continued teaching in Zurich until 1928 when she and Jean Arp moved to Meudon, near Paris. Together with her husband and artist Theo van Doesburg, Taeuber-Arp received a commission to design the interior Café de l’Aubette (destroyed and rediscovered), one of the first modernist spaces to unify form and function, in Strasbourg, France.

Strasbourg Ciné Bal de l'Aubette
The café commission marked the beginning of the most productive period in the artist’s life. She joined several artists’ organizations, edited and wrote for radical publications, and exhibited her work throughout Europe.
Arp was a friend of the celebrated Surrealist Max Ernst, and is considered a founder member of the anarchic Dada movement, which celebrated the avant-garde, conceptual approach to creating art, often resulting in unorthodox materials appearing in abstract, unusual compositions.


Taeuber-Arp on the 50 Swiss Francs note
Taeuber-Arp and her husband fled to southern France when the Nazis invaded Paris. In late 1942, they returned to Zurich, where she died in 1943, the 12 January. After Taeuber-Arp’s accidental death by carbon monoxide poisoning, Arp worked to promote her legacy, in part by producing a number of posthumous “re-creations” of her artworks.


  • What is Dadaisme?
  • The Dadaist movement was an art movement of the European avant-garde in the early 20th century.

  • The movement sprung up in Zurich, Switzerland during and immediately after World War I, largely in reaction to the 10 million dead killed during the conflict.




Cabaret Voltaire, Zurich

  • In 1916 the Dadaists - the nonsense poet Hugo Ball and the maverick writer and drummer Richard Huelsenbeck  - began to put on performances in the Cabaret Voltaire club in Zurich, expressing their disgust with the war.

  • The artists blamed rational society for bringing European civilisation to the brink of destruction so they created art that was anything but rational: it was absurd and playful and it often meant nothing.



Tristan Tzara, the poet




Education:
«'Doodling’ other artists gives us the chance to truly appreciate their work through the study and deconstruction of their art

Artist: Mark Holmes

The same quote can be applied when we include the Doodle into our lessons. The students will learn to admire the work of an artist, beginning to appreciate art and later they wil understand the artist, his/her work, and the 'epoque' or artistic movement she/he integrated.

As I always write, Arts are absolutely necessary to a complete and better education of children and young adolescents. 

Discovering Arts in school education, some students can pick their inner path on Arts and later they will choose Art colleges and Higher Schools of Arts to develop their aptitude by a real leaning of Arts.

Digital culture is well-come into the the curricula as an important tool to tackle the world's toughest problems creating bridges and establish a truly intercultural world, where diversity can be celebrated, a world where different cultures not only coexist but value each other for their contributions and potential.


Level: All levels. 
  • Focus on Arts (Vocational Education) ; School of Arts (Higher Education.
  • Secondary education: cross-curricular Literature & Arts.
Curricula: Arts ; Literature ; Design ; Digital Arts.

Resources for teachers & students:

Note video: This is an excerpt from Brain Caplan's documentary-in-progress on the Dada movement, titled, Random Acts of Beauty: The Story of Dada.

Arp Museum:
Museo Correr:
MoMA: Artists

National Museo of Women in Arts:


"Dada is for dreams, colorful paper masks, kettledrums, sound poems, concretions, poem statistics, for things that are not far from picking flowers and making bouquets." 
Hans / Jean Arp

G-Souto

19.01.2016

updated 19.01.2020
Copyright © 2020G-Souto'sBlog, gsouto-digitalteacher.blogspot.com®

Creative Commons License
Education : Talking about Dada movement with Sophie Taeuber-Arp # her art bG-Souto is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

No comments:

Post a Comment