About
Lady Dada is an artist from Turkey who has been living in Milan for years. She creates
collages and photomontages using clippings from newspapers, magazines, and original
photographs, mostly from the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. This entirely analog and artisanal
technique allows her to compose and recompose reality with the intention of surpassing
the meaning of the images, discovering their metaphysical and symbolic side.
In her collages, the figures are mostly feminine, and her research focuses on a certain
type of feminine aesthetic – affirmative, disruptive, elegant – which is characteristic of the
1960s and 1970s. However, while in the collages of feminist neo-avant-garde artists of
those years, such as Ketty La Rocca, the visual language was strongly political, in Lady
Dada’s works, words lose their semantic meaning, and the images blend together
according to a more private, secretive, and ironic plane.
Lady Dada was born in Istanbul in 1975 but has been living in Milan for years.
With a degree in Business Administration, she is also a photographer and cinephile. She
started composing her collages during the pandemic and hasn’t stopped since then. She
says of herself: “Lady Dada as an artistic character was born as an expression of the
dynamism and fragmentation that are part of me and that have found their ideal
expression in the collage technique. Art brings creativity and color into my life and makes
me feel less alone.” Her works have been exhibited in a solo show at the BeerGallery in
Milan (“Words for Everyone”) and in a group exhibition at the Temporary Design Gallery in
Monza.
Lady Dada contributed animated artwork for the 3kStatic album Telestial – as featured on
Spotify.