“Exquisite Corpse” is a surrealist game in which players draw part of a picture and then fold the paper along the edge of the drawing so that the next player, who must continue those lines with their own drawing, cannot see what previous players drew. The result is a picture that, like Hedwig in “Exquisite Corpse,” is a queer collage of connected but very different parts.

Here’s the result of a 1928 game of Exquisite Corpse played by legendary surrealists Yves Tanguy, Man Ray, Max Morise, and André Breton:

The game can also be played with writing, in which case each player can see only the end of what the last player wrote.