Exquisite corpse
Exquisite corpse, also known as exquisite cadaver, is a method by which a collection of words or images is collectively assembled. Each collaborator adds to a composition in sequence, either by following a rule or by being allowed to see only the end of what the previous person contributed.
History
This technique was invented by surrealists and is similar to an old parlour game called Consequences in which players write in turn on a sheet of paper, fold it to conceal part of the writing, and then pass it to the next player for a further contribution. Surrealism principal founder André Breton reported that it started in fun, but became playful and eventually enriching. Breton said the diversion started about 1925, but Pierre Reverdy wrote that it started much earlier, at least as early as 1918.The name is derived from a phrase that resulted when Surrealists first played the game, "Le cadavre exquis boira le vin nouveau." André Breton writes that the game developed at the residence of friends at an old house in Montparnasse, 54 rue du Château. Besides himself he mentions Marcel Duhamel, Jacques Prévert, Yves Tanguy and Benjamin Péret as original participants.
Henry Miller often played the game to pass time in French cafés during the 1930s.
Picture consequences
The parlour game of Consequences is sometimes played as picture consequences, with portions of a person replacing the written sentence fragments of the original. Later the game was adapted to drawing and collage, producing a result similar to children's books in which the pages were cut into thirds, the top third pages showing the head of a person or animal, the middle third the torso, and the bottom third the legs, with children having the ability to "mix and match" by turning pages.In the context of parties, it can be run as a circle game in which a group of people cooperatively draw a person, taking about 20 minutes to play.
An image of a person is drawn in portions, with the paper folded after each portion so that later participants cannot see earlier portions.
It has been recommended for use as a tool for teaching about tattoos.
Picture consequences can be used to practice vocabulary and to encourage a class to work together.
The game is also recommended as a "rainy day" game. The point of the game is the surprise reveal at the end or for simple fun.
The person can be drawn in four steps: The head, the torso, the legs and the feet. As a last step, a player may label the drawing, still unseen, with someone's name.
The name "picture consequences" is also sometimes used to describe Telephone Pictionary, a game in which players alternate writing descriptions and matching illustrations based on the previous step.
Modern examples
- The cut-up technique of William S. Burroughs and Brion Gysin was influenced by Surrealism.
- Naked Came the Stranger is a 1969 erotic novel written as a literary hoax to parody American literary trends of the time. The credited author is the fictive "Penelope Ashe," though it was written by twenty-four journalists led by Mike McGrady, with each author writing a chapter without any knowledge of what the others had written.
- is the name of a literary magazine founded in 1983 published by Andrei Codrescu.
- Naked Came the Manatee is a mystery thriller parody novel. Each of its thirteen chapters was written, in sequence, by a different Florida writer, beginning with Dave Barry and ending with Carl Hiaasen.
- Exquisite Fruit is a variant conceived by members of the National Puzzlers' League in which a round of trivia questions are sequentially written by players, given an answer provided by each player at the start, and the resulting question posed to another player at the end.
Art
- The Narrative Corpse is a comic book chain-story by 69 all-star cartoonists co-edited by Art Spiegelman and R. Sikoryak.
- The Breaking Boredom Project in graphic design, Cairo
- The Exquisite Corpse Adventure, commissioned by the Library of Congress, uses well-known children's authors and illustrators
- Jake and Dinos Chapman have produced a number of exquisite corpses.
Film and TV
- Apichatpong Weerasethakul's 2000 film Mysterious Object at Noon uses this technique with a mixture of documentary and fictional film.
- The Exquisite Corpse Project is a 2012 feature-length comedy film written using the exquisite corpse technique.
- A Rick and Morty 2017 trailer for season 3 is titled "Exquisite Corpse" and features a multiple minute long sequence to the song "Thursday in the Danger Room" from the album Run the Jewels 3 by Run the Jewels.
- Exquisite Corps and And So Say All of Us are choreographic versions by filmmaker Mitchell Rose.
Music
- In the 1940s, composers John Cage, Virgil Thomson, Henry Cowell, and Lou Harrison, composed a set of pieces using this same process--writing a measure of music, with 1 or 2 additional notes, folding it on the bar line then passing it to the next person. The pieces were later arranged by Robert Hughes and published as Party Pieces.
- The band Bauhaus have a track titled "Exquisite Corpse" on their third studio album , which appears to have been created in this collaborative surrealist style.
- Tiemko have a track titled "In Memoriam" on their fourth studio album presented as a "musical exquisite corpse".
- A song in the musical Hedwig and the Angry Inch is entitled "Exquisite Corpse".
- The musician Daedelus named his album Exquisite Corpse.
- The band Warpaint named their debut EP Exquisite Corpse because of their collaborative songwriting style.
- George Watsky's 2016 album, x Infinity, features a song titled "Exquisite Corpse" using this technique featuring verses by several artists.
- Australian sound art collective use the exquisite corpse process to create music, as well as the song and album titles, for their ongoing series of monthly collaborative releases.
- In December 2019, French alternative-pop-rock band Therapie TAXI released an album entitled Cadavre Exquis, relating to the artistic visuals and collaborative production of the opus.
- Swedish composer uses the technique in his 2002 orchestral work Exquisite Corpse.
Architecture
- In 2018, Simon Weir began producing catenary vaults where a dozen designers collaborate blindly using the Exquisite corpse method.
Games
- In ...and then we died, players use word fragment tarot cards to form words to tell the story of their collective deaths.