Salut tout le monde--
Now through 24 July 2005 at the Haggerty Museum of Art, Marquette Univeristy
there is a lrage exhibtion just opened a few days ago of
"Visual Poetry: Contemporary Art from Italy"
for more information you can check
www.marquette.edu/haggerty
also you can find on line big
At 07:36 PM 6/25/01 -0700, you wrote:
At 12:24 PM 6/21/01 -0400, you wrote:
Pedro et al:
Sorry to take so long to respond further to this matter - I've been on a
retreat (during which I took a field trip to the Sackner Archive of
Concrete and Visual Poetry in /Miami Beach) - but as to defining
At 12:24 PM 6/21/01 -0400, you wrote:
Pedro et al:
Sorry to take so long to respond further to this matter - I've been on a
retreat (during which I took a field trip to the Sackner Archive of
Concrete and Visual Poetry in /Miami Beach) - but as to defining What
visual poetry is, that's a tough
Pedro et al:
Sorry to take so long to respond further to this matter - I've been on a
retreat (during which I took a field trip to the Sackner Archive of
Concrete and Visual Poetry in /Miami Beach) - but as to defining What
visual poetry is, that's a tough one. I tend to think of it as
davidbc. My own form of visual poetry is a plastic bag of three dimensional
objects- since 1975 I have displayed these as visal poetry to recieve
little or no response from most viewers. In fact I can recall almost no
glimpses of recognition as to what was going on from any single viewer. What
davidbc. My own form of visual poetry is a plastic bag of three dimensional
objects- since 1975 I have displayed these as visal poetry to recieve
little or no response from most viewers. In fact I can recall almost no
glimpses of recognition as to what was going on from any single viewer. What
Yes, Owen,
Thank you for mentioning Patchen.
Pedro
At 08:09 AM 5/28/01 -0400, you wrote:
I don't know why Kenneth Patchen is overlooked but he was one of my first
great heros. I discovered his work on LP at the Lamont undergraduate
poetry library in 1960 and have collected his bboks
I accidentally gave away my copy of Shy Pornographer some years back and I
haven't been the same since.
sigh.
BadgerGirl
--
From: Pedro [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: FLUXLIST: Visual Poetry
Date: Tue, May 29, 2001, 10:07 AM
Yes, Owen,
Thank you
I don't know why Kenneth Patchen is overlooked but he was one of my first
great heros. I discovered his work on LP at the Lamont undergraduate poetry
library in 1960 and have collected his bboks and LPs since. They have a
Kenneth Patchen Festival in Youngstown, Ohio (I think) every year. -Don
John,
I have a question.
This arose in conversation recently.
Who came up with Visual Poetry?
I'm guessing it was the Futurists with all their wild experiments
with Fonts and typography.
You may not know the answer but I thought you might.
Does Bern Porter figure in to this picture
in as a practitioner of
foundpoetry (and thereforevisual). kenneth patchen is often overlooked and
should not be.
yours,
dave
-Original Message-
From: Pedro [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: May 25, 2001 9:34 AM
Subject: FLUXLIST: Visual Poetry
John,
I have a question
Dave wrote:
kenneth patchen is often overlooked and
should not be.
I would agree and assume you're referrring to books like
Wonderings...do you have any ideas why he's overlooked?
cheers,
Sol.
:02 AM
Subject: Re: FLUXLIST: Visual Poetry
Dave wrote:
kenneth patchen is often overlooked and
should not be.
I would agree and assume you're referrring to books like
Wonderings...do you have any ideas why he's overlooked?
cheers,
Sol.
Dear fellow workers:
Visual poetry I think actually begins with cave paintings--petroglyphs--
the relationships among presenting visually and sounding--
forms, colors, lines considered as both visual and sound--
and then used as scores as well for performance--
dance--
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