Tristan Tzara

Tristan Tzara was a Romanian and French avant-garde poet, essayist, and performance artist, best known for being one of the founders and central figures of the Dada movement.

This list of books are ONLY the books that have been ranked on the lists that are aggregated on this site. This is not a comprehensive list of all books by this author.

  1. 1. Seven Dada Manifestoes

    This book is a collection of manifestos that serve as a seminal document in the history of the Dada movement, an avant-garde art movement of the early 20th century. The texts within are a blend of satire, polemic, and absurdity, reflecting the movement's disdain for the norms of bourgeois culture and traditional aesthetics. The author, a key figure in Dadaism, uses these manifestos to challenge concepts of art, literature, and politics, advocating for chaos and spontaneity over logic and reason. The work is both a philosophical treatise and a call to arms, encouraging the reader to question the status quo and embrace the liberating power of nonconformity and irrationality.

    The 7216th Greatest Book of All Time
    Purchase from Amazon
  2. 2. Dada är Allt!

    In this avant-garde manifesto, the essence of Dadaism is explored through a series of provocative essays and poetic declarations that challenge conventional art and societal norms. The text delves into the chaotic and rebellious spirit of the Dada movement, emphasizing the importance of spontaneity, absurdity, and the rejection of traditional aesthetics. It serves as a call to arms for artists and thinkers to embrace the irrational and the nonsensical as a means of liberating creativity from the constraints of logic and reason, ultimately advocating for a radical transformation of art and life itself.

  3. 3. Seven Dada Manifestos And Lampisteries

    A combustible collection of manifestos and satirical pieces that violently rejects conventional art, literature, and bourgeois values, celebrating chance, absurdity, and spontaneity as creative methods. The writings use provocation, collage-like language, and theatrical gestures to overturn logic and traditional aesthetics, urging destruction of old forms and the invention of new, anti-rational modes of expression and performance.

  4. 4. Dada Manifesto

    A fiery, irreverent call to reject the conventions and pretensions of bourgeois art and society, the manifesto celebrates chance, nonsense, and provocation as creative principles and urges artists to embrace spontaneity, contradiction, and destructive play as means of liberation. It attacks logic, reason, and traditional aesthetics, advocating for collage, performance, and unpredictable juxtapositions that break language and meaning and frame artistic creation as an act of revolt and renewal.