Hans Richter, City College of New York, 1948
Hans Richter
Encounters from Dada till Today
Translated by Christopher Middleton
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
DelMonico Books Prestel
Munich London New York
Published in conjunction with the exhibition Hans Richter: Encounters at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (May 5September 2, 2013) and the Centre Pompidou-Metz (September 29, 2013February 24, 2014).
Copyright 2013 Hans Richter Estate
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any other information storage and retrieval system or otherwise, without written permission from the copublishers.
Editor: Sara Cody
Associate Editor: Phil Graziadei
Designer: Maja Blazejewska
Photo Editor: Dawson Weber
Production Manager: Karen Farquhar
LACMA Publications:
Head of Publications: Lisa Gabrielle Mark
Senior Editor: Sara Cody
Editor: Jennifer MacNair Stitt
Associate Editor: Phil Graziadei
Administrative Assistant: Tricia Coche
Rights and Reproductions: Piper Severance, Jeanne Dreskin, and Dawson Weber
Copublished in 2013 by Los Angeles County Museum of Art and DelMonico Books, an imprint of Prestel Publishing
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Library of Congress Control Number: 2013935442
eISBN 978-3-641-11754-2
Frontis: Hans Richter, Dragonfly (Counterpoint in Red, Black, Gray, and White), 1943, detail, oil on canvas, 29 x 15 in., private collection.
Hans Richter Estate, photo 2013 Museum Associates/LACMA
CONTENTS
Hans Richter, Zurich, 1959.
Photo: J. Bruell, Zurich
EDITORS FOREWORD
This publication of Encounters from Dada till Today marks the first time that Hans Richters memoir, originally published in German in 1973 as Begegnungen von Dada bis heute , has appeared in English. In the chapter titled The Search for New Sounds, Richter comments that in modern visual art (e.g., the use of computers), endeavors are afoot that will enlarge the range of auditory and visual experience with the aid of twentieth-century science and technology. Where this will have led to fifty years from now, only our children and grandchildren will know. In this light, producing Encounters from Dada till Today in e-book and print-on-demand formats seems particularly apt for such a forward-thinking artist who spent his career constantly embracing advancements in technology and new ways of communicating.
Born in Berlin in 1888, Richter was a pioneering avant-garde painter and filmmaker at the center of some of most important movements of the early twentieth century, including Expressionism, Dadaism, Constructivism, and Surrealism. Forced out of Germany by Hitlers regime in 1933, he eventually immigrated to the United States in 1941, where he became an influential film teacher and a productive writer, and continued to paint well into the final years of his life. His book Dada: Art and Anti-Art (published in German in 1964 and in English in the following year) quickly became a major reference, eventually being translated into nine languages and still in print today.
Following Art and Anti-Art , Richter turned to assembling the highly personal collection of memories, anecdotes, and episodes that are presented here. Encounters from Dada till Today reads as a virtual Whos Who of the twentieth-century avant-garde, with Hans Arp, Alexander Calder, Jean Cocteau, Joseph Cornell, Marcel Duchamp, Federico Fellini, Emmy Hennings, Hannah Hch, Allan Kaprow, Kazimir Malevich, Man Ray, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Kurt Schwitters, Dorothea Tanning, and Tristan Tzara (to name literally just a few) all making appearances in its pages. Though Richter was fluent in English by this timehe once quipped that he taught himself the language primarily by reading Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett novelshe wrote in German, and so would eventually need a suitable translator.
In early 1967, Richter began corresponding with British poet and translator Christopher Middleton, an instructor at the University of Texas at Austin who had written about Dadaism and Expressionism and, by that time, had begun to introduce the English-speaking world to the work of Swiss writer Robert Walser. Middleton recalls that the two met in person, probably later that year, at an event organized by literary scholar Roger Shattuck at UT-Austin. Today he recalls Richters charisma: a very amusing and charming man, but also someone whose significance you understood right away. The two met again in Locarno, Switzerland, in late 1969, and probably discussed translating Richters new book by the early 1970s.
Begegnungen von Dada bis heute was published in Germany in 1973, and Middleton produced his translation in 1974 (with some content altered slightly from the German edition). But due to Richters illnesses and advancing age, the English edition remained unpublished. After Richters death in 1976, Middletons typewritten manuscript was deposited in the archives of the Harry Ransom Center at UT-Austin.
Nearly thirty years later, Timothy O. Benson, curator of the Robert Gore Rifkind Center for German Expressionist Studies at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, began working on what would become the first major Richter exhibition since the late 1980s. Inspired by Richters own acknowledgment of the importance of his interactions with other artists throughout his life, Benson titled the exhibition Hans Richter: Encounters , conceiving it as an examination of Richters work in the context of the social dimensions of his career. Additionally, with the passionate support of the Richter Estateparticularly administrator Veronica Boswell and curator/archivist Erik de Bourbon-Parmethe idea emerged to issue Encounters from Dada till Today as a companion volume to the exhibition catalogue.
In Mary DelMonico, of DelMonico Books Prestel, we found an enthusiastic partner in this endeavor. My former LACMA colleague, Thomas Frick, kindly put me in touch with Christopher Middleton, who not only gave the project his blessing but graciously took the time to recall his own encounters with Richter more than forty years ago. Our photo editor, Dawson Weber, worked with the indefatigable Erik de Bourbon-Parme in finding just the right images to illustrate as many of Richters friendships as possible. Designer Maja Blazejewska created the perfect complement to her striking exhibition catalogue. My fellow editor Phil Graziadei and I have approached the material with a light hand, adding in a few necessary explications and updates while endeavoring to remain as true as possible to Middletons graceful interpretation of Richters original voice.