The Exquisite Corpse remains a crucial experiment in collaborative art, challenging the notion of individual authorship and the constraints of rational thought. By embracing chance and fragmentation, it creates a "collective unconscious" on paper, resulting in images that are far stranger—and often more profound—than those produced individually. References MoMA - Make Your Own Exquisite Corpse Tate - Cadavre Exquis (Exquisite Corpse) Academy of American Poets - Play Exquisite Corpse eScholarship - Exquisite Corpses Make Your Own Exquisite Corpse | Magazine - MoMA
While starting as a literary game, it was quickly adapted for drawing, allowing artists to create hybrid, distorted figures. Modern applications, inspired by artists like Wangechi Mutu and Louise Bourgeois, often include collage and digital manipulation to distort the human body. Corpse Experiments
A sheet of paper is folded into three or four sections. Methodology: The Exquisite Corpse remains a crucial experiment in
The first participant draws a head or writes a subject (e.g., noun) on the top section. Modern applications, inspired by artists like Wangechi Mutu