MENU

Murder in the Alps:
"The Dada Killer" Collectables

Various hidden items are scattered throughout each chapter of Murder in the Alps. Before the game update from the end of 2023, finding each item rewarded the player with bonus energy; the current version provides cash to spend in their My Home and work toward diamond-rewarding achievements.

Click on a collectable below for additional information and how to obtain it.

Anatomy as Bride
Anatomy as BrideMax Ernst, 1921. Arms stretched toward a sea riding bloody waves and foam under metal.
Bicycle Wheel
Bicycle WheelMarcel Duchamp, 1913. An invention to challenge assumptions about what constitutes a work of art.
Black and White
Black and WhiteMan Ray, 1926. Depicts connotation on racial diversity.
Dada Dolls
Dada DollsHannah Höch, 1920. Depicts technology causing humans to become more machine-like themselves.
Dada Head
Dada HeadTaeuber-Arp, 1920. Has a dual function as a portait and a hat-stand.
Emmy Hennings
Emmy HenningsA pet and muse for Dada artists of the time. Born in 1885.
Fountain
FountainMarcel Duchamp, 1917. Widely seen as an icon of twentieth-century art.
Gift
GiftMan Ray, 1921. A conjunction of two alien objects: domesticity and carpentry
High Finance
High FinanceHannah Höch, 1923. Depicts a satirical view of industrialism and financial power in Germany.
Hugo Ball
Hugo BallAn author, poet, and the founder of the Dada movement in European art in Zürich. Born in 1886.
L.H.O.O.Q.
L.H.O.O.Q.Marcel Duchamp, 1919. An attack on the iconic Mona Lisa and traditional art.
Lonely Metropolitan
Lonely MetropolitanHerbert Bayer, 1932. From a series of photomontages illustrating his own dreams.
Marlene
MarleneHannah Höch, 1930. This piece alludes to the subject's ambiguous sexual identity.
Spirit of Our Time
Spirit of Our TimeRaoul Hausmann, 1920. A metaphor for the inability to rebuild a better Germany.
Squares
SquaresJean Arp, 1917. Squares Arranged According to the Laws of Chance.
The Bearded Heart
The Bearded HeartTristan Tzara, 1922. A single-issue newspaper issued in response to André Breton.
The Executioner of Justice
The Executioner of JusticeJohn Heartfield, 1933. A blind and broken sense of justice often leads directly to war.
The Skat Players
The Skat PlayersOtto Dix, 1920. Depicts war veterans still being able to play cards.
The Skittle Picture
The Skittle PictureKurt Schwitters, 1921. An assemblage in which two- and three-dimensional objects are combined.
Tristan Tzara
Tristan TzaraA poet and one of the central figures of the Dada movement. Born in 1896.

Return to the chapter list