Hannah Höch collages

Hannah Höch :: Fremde Schönheit [Strange beauty], Berlin, ca. 1929, original photographic collage on coloured paper signed H.H. (The Geneviève & Jean-Paul Kahn Library). | src la gazette drouot
Hannah Höch :: Fremde Schönheit [Strange beauty], Berlin, ca. 1929, original photographic collage on coloured paper signed H.H. (The Geneviève & Jean-Paul Kahn Library). | src la gazette drouot
Hannah Höch :: Über dem Wasser | Over the Water, 1943-1946. Collage of paper and offset prints on cardboard. From: Sheroes of Photography exhibition. © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn. | src Galerie Kicken Berlin
Hannah Höch :: Über dem Wasser | Over the Water, 1943-1946. Collage of paper and offset prints on cardboard. From: Sheroes of Photography exhibition. © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn. | src Galerie Kicken Berlin
Hannah Höch :: Kleine Sonne (Little Sun), 1969, Collage, 16.3 × 24.2 cm, Landesbank Berlin AG. | src Whitechapel Gallery
Hannah Höch :: Kleine Sonne (Little Sun), 1969, Collage, 16.3 × 24.2 cm, Landesbank Berlin AG. | src Whitechapel Gallery

Hannah Höch was an artistic and cultural pioneer. A member of Berlin’s Dada movement in the 1920s, she was a driving force in the development of 20th century collage. Splicing together images taken from fashion magazines and illustrated journals, she created a humorous and moving commentary on society during a time of tremendous social change. Höch was admired by contemporaries such as George Grosz, Theo van Doesburg and Kurt Schwitters, yet was often overlooked by traditional art history. As the first major exhibition of her work in Britain, the show puts this inspiring figure in the spotlight.

The exhibition examines Höch’s extraordinary career from the 1910s to the 1970s. Starting with early works influenced by her time working in the fashion industry, it includes key photomontages such as High Finance (1923) which critiques the relationship between bankers and the army at the height of the economic crisis in Europe.

A determined believer in artistic freedom, Höch questioned conventional concepts of relationships, beauty and the making of art. Höch’s collages explore the concept of the ‘New Woman’ in Germany following World War I and capture the style of the 1920s avant-garde theatre. The important series ‘From an Ethnographic Museum’ combines images of female bodies with traditional masks and objects, questioning traditional gender and racial stereotypes.

Astute and funny, the exhibition reveals how Höch established collage as a key medium for satire whilst being a master of its poetic beauty. | quoted from Whitechapel Gallery

Sirenas del Aire, ca. 1935–36

Lola Álvarez-Bravo :: Sirenas del Aire, ca. 1935–36, printed ca. 1958. Álvarez-Bravo offers a pairing of the modern and the classical world using the surrealist approach of juxtaposing improbable objects. Two mermaids, their backs to the viewer, float on an empty picture. These mermaids (or sirens) have chosen a more modern vehicle to send their messages, a typewriter. | src Surrealism and Women Artists

Oriental dance, 1920s

Otton Engel’s Oriental dance, mid-1920s. Collage and coloured paper on paper. Catalogue of the third “Art of Movement” exhibition, 1927, Nº 543. OE | src Nicoletta Misler’s The Russian Art of Movement 1920-1930

Ray Johnson · designs · collages

Raymond Edward Johnson (Ray Johnson) ~ Untitled, 1960-62. Printed paper and metallic string mounted on board. | src MoMA
left: Hand-lettered backdrop by Ray Johnson from the March 2, 1958 New York Times Fashion Supplement
right: A Boobook is a small Australian owl. Promotional flyer (ca. 1956) (*)

(*) Promotional flyer for “Ray Johnson-Drawings, Lettering, Design” and “Merce Cunningham and Dance Company at Brooklyn Academy of Music, January 12th [1957], three new titles by Jonathan Williams’ Jargon Society and Cy Twombly at the Stable Gallery opening January 2 [1957]”. ca. 1956