Saturday, April 5, 2008

Richard Huelsenbeck

Richard Huelsenbeck (April 231892 - April 301974) was a poetwriter and drummer born in FrankenauHesse-Nassau.

Huelsenbeck was a medical student on the eve of World War I. He was invalided out of the army and emigrated to ZürichSwitzerland in February 1916, where he fell in with the Cabaret Voltaire. In January 1917, he moved to Berlin, taking with him the ideas and techniques which helped him found the Berlin Dada group. 'To make literature with a gun in my hand had for a time been my dream,'(1) he wrote in 1920. His ideas fitted in with left-wing politics current at time in Berlin. However, idealistic Huelsenbeck and his companions were their challenge 'Dada is German Bolshevism' had unfortunate repercussions later, when the National Socialistsdenounced all aspects of modern art as Kunstboschewismust. Later in life, he moved to New York City, where he practiced Jungian psychoanalysis under the name Charles R. Hulbeck. In 1970 he returned to the Ticino region of Switzerland.

Huelsenbeck was the editor of the Dada Almanach, and wrote Dada SieghtEn Avant Dada and other Dadaist works.

Of his music, Hugo Ball wrote, "Huelsenbeck has arrived. He pleads for an intensification of rhythm (Negro rhythm). He would best love to drum literature & toperdition."

Until the end of his life, Huelsenbeck insisted, "Dada is still existing," although the movement's other founders might not have agreed.

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