1924  

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==Deaths == ==Deaths ==
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 +== Notes ==
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 +*[[The Inhuman Woman]] (1924)
 +*[[Aelita]] (1924)
 +*[[The Hands of Orlac]] (1924)
 +*[[Ballet Mécanique]] (1924)
 +*[[Diagonal-Symphonie]] (1924) - [[Viking Eggeling]]
 +*Adam and Eve (1924) Marcel Duchamp and Bronja Perlmutter
 +$$Three years later, immediately after the self-portrait in the Monte Carlo Bond –in Cinésketch, a theatrical diversion of Picabia and René Clair- Duchamp reappears as Adam in a tableau vivant based on a sixteenth-century painting by Cranach, displaying an evidently artificial beard (a significant counterpart to the ambiguous beard of foam), a watch, and a shaved pubis. Certainly not the last 'shaving' in his work.
 +*Inversions
 +**Inversions, the first French gay journal is published. Produced between 1924 and 1926, it stopped publication after the French government charged the publishers with compromising public morality.
 +*André Breton publishes the [[surrealist manifesto]]
 +*Heroin Illegal in USA
 +**Since 1924, when Congress made it illegal to manufacture, possess, or sell heroin, America has been free from heroin as well -- if not in practice, then at least in theory. --Schaffer Library of Drug Policy
 +
 +*''[[Corydon]]'' (1924) André Gide
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$$Three years later, immediately after the self-portrait in the Monte Carlo Bond –in Cinésketch, a theatrical diversion of Picabia and René Clair- Duchamp reappears as Adam in a tableau vivant based on a sixteenth-century painting by Cranach, displaying an evidently artificial beard (a significant counterpart to the ambiguous beard of foam), a watch, and a shaved pubis. Certainly not the last 'shaving' in his work.

  • Inversions
    • Inversions, the first French gay journal is published. Produced between 1924 and 1926, it stopped publication after the French government charged the publishers with compromising public morality.
  • André Breton publishes the surrealist manifesto
  • Heroin Illegal in USA
    • Since 1924, when Congress made it illegal to manufacture, possess, or sell heroin, America has been free from heroin as well -- if not in practice, then at least in theory. --Schaffer Library of Drug Policy




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