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Johannes Baader




He was born in Stuttgart , Germany, and died in Schloss Adeldorf , Lower Bavaria.

The son of a metalworker for the royal buildings in Stuttgart, Johannes
Baader studied at the state trade school there from 1892 to 1895 and
then at the technical college. In 1903 he began working as a mortuary
architect in Dresden . By 1905 he was in Berlin , where he met Raoul Hausmann , beginning a friendship that would eventually be at the
centre of Berlin Dada. In 1906 he conceived his Utopian
Interdenominational ''World Temple'', drawing on various forms,
including Greek and Indian archetypes. Described in sketches and
writings, the world temple in its grandest form was to be 1500 metres
high and unify all of humanity in its building.

In 1914 , Baader published a treatise on Monism entitled ''Vierzehn Briefe
Christi'' (Fourteen Letters of Christ) and during the next several years
contributed to the journals ''Die freie Strasse'' (Free Street) and
''Der Dada''. In 1917 he was certified legally insane, a designation he
used as a license for outrageous public performances parodying public
and mythic identities. Also in 1917 he ran for the Reichstag in
Saarbrücken and, with Hausmann, founded ''Christus GmbH'' (Christ
Ltd), offering membership to pacifists, who, upon being certified with
the identity of Christ, were to be exempted from the draft. In 1918 ,
Baader wrote his quasi-religious tract ''Die acht Weltsätze'' (Eight
World Theses), and in 1919 he declared his own "resurrection" as the
''Oberdada'', President of the Earth.

He expounded on his cosmic
identity in texts and collages (for example, ''Dada Milchstrasse'' (Dada
Milky Way, 1919). His ''Das grosse Plasto-Dio-Dada-Drama'' (The great
Plasto-Dio-Dada-Drama), an assemblage envisioned as a model for Dada
architecture, was shown in Berlin at the 1920 ''Erste internationale
Dada-Messe'' (First International Dada Fair). He also produced sketches
of Visionary Architecture , which, like those of Hausmann and
Jefim Golyscheff , sometimes involved proto- Constructivist girderlike
structures. In the 1920s he continued to produce collages and to
practice as an architect.


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