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#Exquisite Corpse (Cadavre exquis)
the-cricket-chirps · 4 months
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Man Ray, Andre Breton, Yves Tanguy, Max Morise
Exquisite Corpse
1928
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abybweisse · 1 year
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Kuro "Exquisite Corpse" game #1
Here's the base of a chin and neck. Someone please draw a torso or find a Kuro panel torso to put with it.
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Reblog this post with only the base of the torso showing. Then pm me an image of the full torso.
When we get a reblog with the legs and feet, I'll edit them all together.
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smithasandwich · 1 year
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My sections of 4 “exquisite corpse” style drawings I worked on in art class today! I had a lot of fun doing these and the resulting images were wonderful and unique!
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thinkingimages · 2 months
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[CADAVRE EXQUIS]. GALA, Valentine HUGO, André BRETON et Salvador DALÍ. Cadavre exquis. Vers 1930. Dessin à l'encre en deux tons avec noms des participants au verso de la main de Valentine Hugo (272 x 194 mm). Remarquable "cadavre exquis" à quatre mains, exécuté au début des années 30 par Gala, Valentine Hugo, André Breton et Salvador Dalí : ce dernier l'a signé. Les noms des auteurs et la date "vers 1930" ont été indiqués au verso par Valentine Hugo. Fragile, le dessin a été restauré et monté sur carton. On ne distingue la liste des noms que par transparence à l'aide d'une image miroir. Le dessin a été exposé à plusieurs reprises. Étiquettes au verso du Centre Georges Pompidou (collection F. Petit : seul le nom de Dalí est mentionné) et de l'exposition Paris-Barcelone. Étiquette de transport au nom de la galerie 1900/2000. Mouillures. Le dessin a été décadré afin de pouvoir l'examiner. Le cadre est conservé à part.
[EXQUISITE CORPSE]. GALA, Valentine HUGO, André BRETON and Salvador DALÍ. Exquisite Corpse. Circa 1930. Two-tone ink drawing with names of participants on the back by Valentine Hugo's hand (272 x 194 mm). Remarkable "exquisite corpse" with four hands, executed in the early 1930s by Gala, Valentine Hugo, André Breton and Salvador Dalí: the latter signed it. The names of the authors and the date "around 1930" were indicated on the back by Valentine Hugo. Fragile, the drawing has been restored and mounted on cardboard. The list of names can only be distinguished by transparency using a mirror image. The drawing has been exhibited several times. Labels on the back of the Center Georges Pompidou (F. Petit collection: only Dalí's name is mentioned) and the Paris-Barcelona exhibition. Transport label with the name of the gallery 1900/2000. Wetness. The drawing has been deframed so that it can be examined. The frame is kept separately.
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sscreenshot · 1 year
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Cadavre exquis (exquisite corpse) is a collaborative drawing approach first used by surrealist artists to create bizarre and intuitive drawings.
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sodelafo · 2 years
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Exquisite Corpse
Exquisite Corpse, or Cadavre Exquis, to give it its original title, started out as a surrealist writing game in 1920s Paris. The name comes from a line in one of the original games: “The exquisite corpse will drink the new wine.” Penned by Andre Breton. It’s quite simple really, you just write a sentence and then fold it over (leaving part of the sentence uncovered) and pass it on. The next…
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instintodejuego · 11 days
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Exquisite corpse. Max Morise, Man Ray, Yves Tanguy, Joan Miró. 1927.
Jugando como los surrealistas - Cadáver Exquisito
El cadáver exquisito consiste en que los jugadores se turnan para escribir una palabra o frase en una hoja de papel y luego doblar el papel para que solo la última palabra o frase sea visible para el siguiente jugador. El resultado final es un poema o una frase con conexiones sorprendentes e inesperadas entre palabras y frases. El nombre se deriva de una frase que surgió cuando los surrealistas lo jugaron por primera vez, "Le cadavre exquis boira le vin nouveau". (“El cadáver exquisito beberá el vino nuevo”).
En las artes visuales, el Cadáver Exquisito se puede adaptar a un juego de dibujo. En esta versión, los jugadores se turnan para dibujar cualquier cosa, doblar el papel para ocultar su dibujo dejando solo unas pequeñas líneas de guía y pasárselo al siguiente jugador. El resultado final es una imagen colaborativa y a menudo surrealista como la mostrada.
Tanto la versión literaria como la visual del juego pueden usarse como inspiración o punto de partida para proyectos artísticos.
Paso 1
Arme un grupo de al menos tres personas. No necesitan ser personas que sepan dibujar.
Paso 2
Reparta una hoja de papel a cada jugador y cada uno comienza a dibujar libremente en una sección de la hoja.
Paso 3
Se recomienda establecer un tiempo no muy prolongado para dedicarle a cada sección. Por ejemplo, mínimo 20 segundos y máximo 1 minuto, todos deben cumplir el mismo tiempo.
Paso 4
Una vez las personas acaban de dibujar su sección del papel, la doblan de manera que solo se vean unas pocas líneas para que la siguiente persona pueda continuar el dibujo.
Paso 5
Se repite el mismo proceso. La actividad acaba cuando todos han dibujado algo en cada hoja y el dibujo se complete.
Paso 6
Discutir los resultados e ideas con el grupo
Paso 7
Cada persona puede dejarse una copia de los dibujos realizados y tomarlos de inspiración para crear algo nuevo.
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nevebennett-viscom · 6 months
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exquisite corpse
Cadavre exquis is similar to the old parlour game consequences – in which players write in turn on a sheet of paper, fold to conceal what they have written, and pass it on to the next player – but adapted so that parts of the body are drawn instead.
It was invented in 1925 in Paris by the surrealists Yves Tanguy, Jacques Prévert, André Breton and Marcel Duchamp. The name ‘cadavre exquis’ was derived from a phrase that resulted when they first played the game, ‘le cadavre exquis boira le vin nouveau’ (‘the exquisite corpse will drink the new wine’).
Cadavre exquis as a drawing approach has been used by other artists since the surrealists notably the YBA artists Jake and Dinos Chapman. - TATE
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its a comedic way of drawing something where different elements are put together to create a caryoonish like image.
frieda Kahlo also played the game and depicted her husband, it is thought she is one of the first people to play it, this is often thought of as a party game since everyone adds to it and noone can expect the outcome. This links to the butterfly effect, becuase noone could predict the was the line of narrative would go. since everyone is contributong their own experiances and thoughts of what might be funny to the image and everyone has their own drawing style.
this is like an early form of madlibs.
this is when you often have no idea what the passage is and you're asked for words of a certain nature (eg adverb, adjective etc) and then that fills in all the appropriate gaps, it creates an unexpected funny passage.
lo1
Informs me to look at ways of experimenting with this and how people can make others interact with one another, maybe without knowledge to create something unique.
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chasenews · 1 year
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Mystery Surrealist Work Comes to Bonhams London
London – Members of the Surrealist group would often play a game. It involved participants drawing or writing on a piece of paper before folding it and passing it on to the next person, who would add their addition without seeing the former’s work, and then, in turn, pass it on to the next player. It was called Cadavre Exquis (or Exquisite Corpse), and it was a practice that would progress into a…
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yorkshireword · 2 years
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He began to realize mysterious things happened in the spaces between words, and that when you arranged them in certain ways, you could create magnetic fields of deep suggestiveness. He experimented with collage and cut-up techniques, snipping words out of newspapers and magazines, tossing them in a hat and drawing them randomly to see what sentences they made. He would write a page of lyrics, then switch all the nouns and verbs. To break up the boredom on the road, Wilco and crew would participate in an old surrealist word game called cadavre exquis (“exquisite corpse”). A typewriter would be set up in the back of the bus, and whenever someone felt like it, he could go back and type a sentence. The one rule: You could only see the sentence typed by the person before you; all the rest were kept covered. 
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gadzooxtian · 2 years
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a digital collage game of exquisite corpse / cadavre exquis my friend and I have been playing for over a decade... gadzooxtian.com/infinity
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the-cricket-chirps · 4 months
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Salvador Dali, Valentine Hugo, Andre Breton, and Gala Dali
Cadavre exquis (sketch)
ca. 1932
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abybweisse · 1 year
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Would anyone be interested in playing a Black Butler-themed game of Exquisite Corpse on Tumblr? I mean the kind that's like the book of pages cut into sections.
I would start by posting only the base of a neck. It might be a drawing or it might be directly from a manga panel.
Next person would add a torso, either drawn or from a manga panel but would only reblog with the base of the torso. Then they would pm me the entire image of the torso.
Third would be the legs and feet. Drawn or manga panel. Just reblog with the full last image.
Last, I would take all the images and "paste" them together. And post the final "Exquisite corpse".
It's almost 3am, and I haven't slept. Does this make sense?
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novimediji22 · 2 years
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exquisite corpse cadavre exquis izvrstan leš
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jokeanddaggerdept · 2 years
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Cadavre Exquis [André Breton, Max Morise, Jeannette Ducrocq Tanguy, Pierre Naville, Benjamin Péret, Yves Tanguy, Jacques Prévert] :: Figure, 1928. Collaborative collage made stacking found printed images of mundane objects (*) in an anthropomorphic figure. | src MoMA (*) The presence of the umbrella recalls a phrase the Surrealists adopted from the poet Comte de Lautréamont (born Isidore Ducasse) as an ideal description of the principle of juxtaposition: "As beautiful as the chance encounter of a sewing machine and an umbrella on an operating table." [quoted from source]
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