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And that refusal did, ultimately, lead to positive change. The art created in and about these venues may have had a limited impact on the turbulent times in which they were made, but the very fact of its existence offers tangible proof of a refusal to accept prejudice or intolerance. “It shows that these kinds of clubs or cabarets could not only happen in the context of public spaces but also in people’s homes,” says Ostende.
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Guests were mostly labourers, but artists and writers also attended and used their experiences as inspiration for their painting and literature.
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Rent parties, a type of small-scale private cabaret where entry would literally pay the host’s rent, were another vital form of entertainment. In doing so he was re-appropriating images that had often been used in an offensively stereotypical manner by white-only venues. The Modernist painter Aaron Douglas captured the joy of jazz dance, an integral feature of all the venues, in a graphic style which incorporated elements of African art. But Cab Calloway, the Cotton Club’s bandleader, credited the smaller cafes, gambling houses and speakeasies – in which itinerant musicians “could hustle up a drink in exchange for a little of our souls” – as the real source of the spread of jazz. Some, like The Dark Tower, were decidedly glamorous. It was an area that offered rich inspiration to artists, writers and musicians, who sought to define a new black identity challenging the abiding stereotypes.Īlthough many of the most famous venues were white patrons only, including The Cotton Club which launched the careers of Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong and Ella Fitzgerald, the majority of clubs and cabarets catered for black and mixed-race audiences. They brought with them the rhythms and melodies of blues and jazz, which made Harlem a centre of dancing, drinking and music during the years of Prohibition. Every word that is spoken and sung here says at least one thing: that this humiliating age has not succeeded in winning our respect,” wrote Ball. It would last six months longer than the cabaret itself. Two weeks later the Battle of Verdun, the longest and bloodiest of the war, began. An open declaration against the atrocities of war, its first line ‘This is how we die’ was a direct, cynical reference to the lyrics ‘this is how we live’, from a popular German military song. A suitably nihilist definition of a movement that tried to understand an era which had lost all reason.īall’s poem Totentanz (Dance of Death) was performed by Hennings on the club’s opening night.
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Dada itself meant ‘nothing’, as the Romanian poet and performance artist Tristan Tzara wrote in its 1918 manifesto. Through improvisation and the deconstruction of language, they aimed for a radical exploration of the collapse of meaning that came to be known as Dada. The cabaret’s broad repertoire included absurdist lectures, sound poetry, abstract dance and masked performance. “Many of the artists in the show were travelling from one scene to another and that idea of a transnational artistic identify is at the core of the show,” she says. With the show opening three weeks before Brexit is due to take place, curator Florence Ostende has come to see it as making a statement about the need to keep boundaries open. In examining the origins of these venues, the exhibition Into the Night: Cabarets and Clubs in Modern Art at the Barbican in London reveals the intense desire to create at times of crisis and, given the current uncertainty of global politics and rising nationalism, prompts us to draw certain parallels to our own times. Throughout, they have offered a safe space in which often marginalised communities can express themselves freely both on and off stage. Operating behind closed doors and liberated from the constraints of societal norms, they have frequently flourished at times of political, social or intellectual crisis – including the chaos and destruction of World War One, the economic and political instability of Weimar Germany and the complex racial politics of the Harlem Renaissance. Cafés, clubs and cabarets have long been a source of inspiration for artists.