
From ‘Horizon. No Horizon’ (ubu Visual Writing editions), by Cecilie Bjørgås Jordheim (2011)

From ‘Horizon. No Horizon’ (ubu Visual Writing editions), by Cecilie Bjørgås Jordheim (2011)


On March 12, 1919, the Chelsea Arts Club held a costume party, called a Dazzle Ball, at Royal Albert Hall in London. It was inspired by the abstract geometric shapes on camouflaged ships in World War I , a method that was first employed by the British, who called it “dazzle painting” or dazzle camouflage. When the Americans adopted a comparable method, they referred to it by other names, among them “baffle painting,” “jazz painting,” and (rarely) “razzle dazzle.”
