Nonlinear Dynamics, Psychology, and Life Sciences, Vol. 18, Iss. 3, Jul, 2014, pp. 329-343 @2014 Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology & Life Sciences Invoking the Muse: Dada's Chaos Abstract: Dada, a self-proclaimed (anti)art (non)movement, took shape in 1916 among a group of writers and artists
who rejected the traditions of a stagnating bourgeoisie. Instead, they adopted means of creative expression
that embraced chaos, stoked instability and undermined logic, an outburst that overturned centuries of
classical and Romantic aesthetics. Paradoxically, this insistence on disorder foreshadowed a new order
in understanding creativity. Nearly one hundred years later, Nonlinear Dynamical Systems theory (NDS)
gives renewed currency to Dada s visionary perspective on chance, chaos and creative cognition.
This paper explores commonalities between NDS-theory and this early precursor of the nonlinear paradigm,
suggesting that their conceptual synergy illuminates what it means to 'be creative' beyond the
disciplinary boundaries of either. Key features are discussed within a 5P model of creativity based on
Rhodes' 4P framework (Person, Process, Press, Product), to which I add Participant-Viewer
for the interactivity of observer-observed. Grounded in my own art practice, several techniques
are then put forward as non-methodical methods that invoke creative border zones, those regions where
Dada's chance and design are wedded in a dialectical tension of opposites. Keywords: Dada, creativity, chance, chaos, disequilibrium |