During the period following the First World War, the Weimar Government arose just as the emancipation of German women began. “The New Woman,” as she was termed, demonstrated liberation and modernity: she voted, worked for a wage, was fashionable, and had fewer children. Dada artist Hannah Höch produced a myriad of works that celebrated the New Woman, especially as she worked in an artist group dominated by men. However, in her collage, Da-Dandy (1919), Höch seemingly critiques this concept, specifically narrowing in on the bourgeois co-option of women’s newfound freedom. Da-Dandy was decidedly not working class; instead, she sported pearl necklaces, high heels, bob haircuts, and fancy dresses, all while being spared from class politics and struggles. In many ways, Da-Dandy is the demonstration and continuation of bourgeois power. This paper first addresses how upper-class women claimed movements and concepts not necessarily meant for them, particularly “The New Woman.” Höch, while known for her critique of the male gaze, focuses on a ‘female gaze’ through a class-derived analysis of the female form in Da-Dandy. Therefore, the paper articulates how her fragmented, deformed, and collaged image centers on the appropriation of the New Woman by the bourgeoisie milieu to call out a new form of fetishization of women.