Artwork Page for Merz 3 Portfolio: Plate 1

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Merz 3 Portfolio: Plate 1

1923
(German, 1887–1948)
Credit Line
Catalogue raisonné
Orchard Karin II,80,1194.2
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Dada was a literary and art movement that began in Europe during World War I. It was characterized by cynicism, expressions of outrage at the conditions of the world, and rebellion against all established artistic conventions and traditional art forms. In 1919 Kurt Schwitters developed his own version of Dada named Merz which took the form of poetry, public recitals of nonsense, and collages. The verbal juxtapositions of unrelated words in his poems had a visual equivalent in compositions made up of bits of paper—urban debris that the artist avidly collected from the city streets. According to Schwitters, "Merz was the second syllable of Kommerz . . . it was cut out and glued on from an advertisement for the Kommerz und Privatbank (Commercial and Private Bank)." The six lithographs in the Merzmappe were made at the Molling printing plant where Schwitters salvaged recently printed material like patterned pieces of paper, parts of illustrations, cigarette wrappers, advertisements, and letters. He made collages of these freshly printed papers while they were still wet with oily printing ink and transferred the images to the lithographic stone.
A vertically oriented print arranges black and gray geometric shapes in a dense, layered cluster. Rectangles and squares in solid, stippled, and checkered patterns overlap across the cream paper. A rabbit and simplified figures appear at the upper left, while telephone poles stick up at the upper right. Concentric circles are flanked by the letters 'Ex' and 'M.' Vertical and horizontal lines texture the fragmented, asymmetrical scene.

Merz 3 Portfolio: Plate 1

1923

Kurt Schwitters

(German, 1887–1948)
Germany, 20th century

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