Xerolage 35
INFRAPICS by Irving Weiss

http://www.xexoxial.org/xerolage/x35.html

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24 pgs, 8.5x11

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INFRAPICS, Xerolage's 35th issue, presents twenty-five visual poems by
Irving Weiss, a self-proclaimed "postmodern avant la lettre cultural
composite." Weiss's verbo-visual INFRAPICS are a variety of textual
and visual poems, detourned cartoons and drawings, each hemmed by a
black frame. The resulting visuo-semantic spaces between content,
frame, and title in these pieces calls for a close reading into
Weiss's ideas on proximity. In "I/T" we see an imposing frame
squeezing the title (or reckless content?) out of the poem at large,
letter-by-letter. Another piece plays off the formal conventions of
the crossword puzzle to engender for a title the list of Across/Down
hints that correspond to the puzzle's empty content. Some of the
INFRAPICS are pictographic puns and redundancies while others disorder
the supposed purpose of framing and naming by placing both
conventional title-language AND lettriste fragments in the space of
the title-function via the blade of the frame's cutting. What emerges
in reading Weiss's INFRAPICS is not merely language or images that
emphasize their verbo-visuality but rather a bird's eye meta-visual, a
theoretic play of schism-gap-and-presence, a seeming lightness that
serves as transparency of depth. Check it out. - jUStin!katKO
<Xexoxial Intern> Dreamtime Village, July 2005

"Infrapics ultimately derive from the presentation of any image, icon,
or text with identifying or explanatory words. Historically, the
infrapic goes back to the emblem poem of the 16th century whose text
referred to the picture above it. More immediately, the infrapic is my
version of the modern single-panel cartoon or news photograph with
legend (now called caption), quote, explanation, or identification
below. I keep to the basic form of the single panel but the content or
relation of content to form may be inverted, subverted or involuted.
In addition, I consider the infrapic to be a visual poem in the way
light verse or parody in verse is a poem." - Irving Weiss,
introduction to INFRAPICS, Xerolage 35

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