Archivi categoria: experimental poetry

gammm submissions / last days of sept.

submissions

GAMMM is still accepting submissions: until the end of September. _ we prefer previously unpublished works. _ no simultaneous submissions. _ please don’t send your opera omnia, but one light email with attached word rtf texts (max 7), and/or jpg (max 7, each LESS than 100Kbytes), and biobibliography (3-7 lines) + your postal address. _ important: insert “text submission: for GAMMM” in the subject line of your email. _ only those submissions that are accepted will get a reply: if you get no reply within two-three months then assume that the works have not been accepted. _ we can’t give detailed replies, nor be engaged in conflicts & discussions about poetics. _ before submitting, please go through the texts hosted by GAMMM

*

invio di testi

GAMMM tutt’ora accetta invii di testi: fino alla fine di settembre. _ preferiamo materiali inediti. _ non spedite contemporaneamente gli stessi materiali ad altri siti. _ non ci mandate l’opera omnia, solo un’email leggera con allegati testi in word rtf (al massimo 7), e/o jpg (massimo 7, ciascuno NON superiore a 100Kbytes), e una biobibliografia (3-7 righe) + l’indirizzo postale. _ importante: inserire “proposta di testi: per GAMMM” nel campo ‘oggetto’ dell’email. _ solo agli invii che verranno accolti sarà data risposta: se non avete risposta entro due-tre mesi, considerate che il materiale non è stato accolto. _ non ci è possibile fornire repliche dettagliate, né trovarci catturati da conflitti & discussioni su poetiche. _ prima di inviare, è opportuno prendere visione del tipo di testi che GAMMM ospita

xerolage 47

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
X E R O L A G E 4 7
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Xerolage 47 –  iu by John Moore Williams

http://xexoxial.org/is/xerolage47/by/john_moore_williams

What we have here are digital talismanic suggestions. In this series of vispo, design elements construct a place for you and eye to land. The dotted i returns u see. Letterforms conjure humanity in their very simplicity. These compositions rework certain concrete poetic ideas. The letters i and u undergo new permutations. It’s a satisfying jaunt through renewed verbo-visual possibilities. John Moore Williams is part of the next wave of visual poet.

– Nico Vassilakis

I didn’t know who I am before I saw Xerolage 47. I didn’t know what I was, or the difference between I and U. I was continually thinking U were I when you were nothing of the kind. But in this book, in this John Moore Williams book, we discover that I am the mother of U, who is I bent in the middle and whose feet point up to the sky. Sometimes, I am a shadow. Sometimes, I is a change. Sometimes, I am in a pile of U’s and cannot get out. Sometimes, I is a whirling of shapes. Sometimes, I am spare. Because I go on forever, and I end at the end of each finger, each of which is just another I. I is clean. I am dirty. And in John Moore Williams’ hands of ten small I’s, I is everywhere and everything, the letter is examined as a meaning and a shape, the I is made into structures of beauty, and if you read the book you just might know what I am and you are.

– Geof Huth

from the introduction:

We are used to thinking of letters as merely media, as windows through which some message is conveyed without interference. They are the superconductors of significance, channels devoid of impedance or static, through which content is, ideally, passed with crystal clarity. This is perhaps most obviously true of the letter I, which has become so concretely associated with individual identity that it has practically disappeared as its own entity. The shape itself reinforces this disappearance; of all the letterforms it is perhaps the sparest, the most Spartan. Compounding this is the fact that it lends itself so easily to the conflation of form and content—it is, unlike most single letters, a word, and one that abstractly yet forcefully resembles its referent. It is the human form in hieroglyph, a body inscribed.

iu seeks to accept, complicate and reject this conflation, this crystal-clear union of sign and signifier. In accepting the sparest of letterforms as its subject, then attempting to create a wide variety of forms out of this simple cloth, the book embraces the generativity of restriction. At the same time, it attempts to explore the multifarious and complex meanings of identity and individuality through simple, iconic forms. Many of the pieces employ the archetypal forms and arrangements of the comic book, that most lyric and identity-obsessed of popular fiction forms, while others work through more concrete arrangements, attempting to graphically depict the semantic content in much the same way the letterform itself does. Oh, and then there’s the letter U, which our shorthand age has rendered nearly as pictographic as I.

John Moore Williams claims to be a poet and, occasionally, an artist. He also claims, marginally more lucratively, to be a copywriter and editor. It’s fairly certain that he lives in Oakland, California, and that he has authored I discover i is an android (Trainwreck Press, 2008), writ10 (VUGG Books, 2008) and [+!] (Calliope Nerve, 2009)—the last in collaboration with Matina Stamatakis and Kane X. Faucher. He also edits the visual poetry journal The Bleed (avantexte.com/thebleed). His blog is called SinTax (fissuresofmen.blogspot.com).

The primary investigation of Xerolage is how collage technique of 20th century art, typography, computer graphics, visual & concrete poetry movements & the art of the copier have been combined. Each issue is devoted to the work of one artist.

24 pages, 8.5 x 11, $7 includes postage Subscriptions: 4 issues/$20

XEXOXIAL EDITIONS 10375 Cty Hway Alphabet La Farge WI 54639

cosa può essere un’installazione, un testo non assertivo, ecc.

può essere questa rosa [da qui]

ma anche questa cosa [da qui]

come si vede, c’è una rima
(che ovviamente non è quella tra le parole)

xerolage 46

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
X E R O L A G E 4 6
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Xerolage 46 – STARINGS by Nico Vassilakis

http://xexoxial.org/is/xerolage46/by/nico_vassilakis

This is what an alphabet does when the books are closed and the
letters are off duty. The characters cavort, mate, replicate,
coagulate, instigate, insinuate, explode… Free of responsibility,
the alphabet dances.

– Rosaire Appel

In Starings we enter into a second universe (macro- and
microcosmic at the same time), where letters and punctuation marks are
every bit as real and hallucinatory, transitory and unerasable
creatures as stars, planets, grains of interstellar dust,
microorganisms or atomic particles are in the first one. They
multiply, interweave with each other and with light and darkness, open
frequently like a zip and what we have inside are themselves again in
a different shape. Their presence is so intense that they (and each
contrapuntal pair of their constellations) would start to speak to us
immediately — if only letters could do that. Listen. This is meaning
in the moment of birth.

– Márton Koppány

Nico Vassilakis’ STARINGS occupies us by combining radically
different registers of meaning — violence and play, destruction and
creation, character and scatter. And we are occupied when we enter
each image, as in taken over or filled up, concentrate on or in, we
have control or have lost control of meaning here. Not that there need
be an either/or in these pages. There is only is. So dwell a while.

– Jenny Sampirisi

Most interesting composition results from the mental equivalent of
crossing one’s eyes, tuning to a place between. Vassilakis hits a
sweet spot with the dynamic works in Starings, their textures,
accumulations, and rhythmic repetitions creating instances of chaos
and clarity, recognition and refusal.

– Lisa Radon

from the introduction:

Dear Alphabet’s Demur,
You take lines and shapes and given possibilities and make alphabet.
You use it to make sounds and you map out trajectories of thought. You
make names and call your children by them. This is done everywhere.
And it’s been done for thousands of years until you became bored with
this method — until you surrounded and suffocated yourself with these
products of your creation.

You go through ubiquitous, unrelenting text — you are altered by text,
by its message. You’ve had to alter how you see. You are forced to
alter text itself. You stare your way through words and into middles
of words. You resolve the noise of your eyes. The information you see,
you seek, to find another nature therein.

REVIEW

“The Noise of Your Eyes” by John Olson on Tillalala Chronicles
http://tillalala.blogspot.com/2010/08/noise-of-your-eyes.html

Nico’s more recent books include: Diptych (Otolith), Askew (bbc
press), TEXT LOSES TIME (manypenny press), staReduction (Book Thug),
Disparate Magnets (BlazeVox), Protracted Type (Blue Lion Books),
Irrational Dude with Robert Mittenthal (tir aux pigeons), West Of
Dodge (redfox press).

With Crag Hill, Nico Vassilakis is editing a major international
anthology of visual poetry, The LastVispo Anthology. Over 130
contributors from over 20 countries.

The primary investigation of Xerolage is how collage technique of 20th
century art, typography, computer graphics, visual & concrete poetry
movements & the art of the copier have been combined. Each issue is
devoted to the work of one artist.

24 pages, 8.5 x 11, $7 includes postage
Subscriptions: 4 issues/$20

XEXOXIAL EDITIONS
10375 Cty Hway Alphabet
La Farge WI 54639

oggi a TUSCANIA: rassegna d’arte e cultura

OGGI

L’Associazione Culturale Piane di Bronzo, l’Associazione Culturale Dark Camera
il Centro Culturale La Camera Verde

presentano

TUSCANIA, 11 SETTEMBRE 2010

Rassegna d’arte e cultura
a cura di Giovanni Andrea Semerano

sabato 11 settembre 2010, dalle 17:00
a Piane di Bronzo, loc. Puntone San Pantaleo

Strada provinciale vetrallese, Tuscania (VT)
+39 0761 445040 / +39 347 2108126

*

Espongono:

Matteo Alessandri, Minou Amirsolemani, Massimo Antonelli, Alfredo Anzellini, Luigi Arcangeli, Franco Belsole, Ilaria Canobbio, Paloma Chaparro, Emanuela Carone, Paola Ceci, Biagio Cepollaro, Cristina Cerminara, Gianni Cortellessa, Giovanni Cozzani, Mario Cusimano, Pietro D’Agostino, Gerardo Di Fabrizio, Dario Di Lernia, Peter Dimpflmeier, Stefania Errore, Francesco Forlani, Luigi Francini, Massimo Fusaro, Cristiano Gabrieli, Marco Giovenale, Jean-Marie Gleize, Matias Guerra, Pasquale Idiv Ruben, Andrea Inglese, Giuliana Laportella, Claudio Laureti, Pascal Leclercq, Franco Mancini, Pierre Martin, Giulio Marzaioli, Grazia Menna, Giovanna Morello, Gabriele Morrione, Andrea Pacioni, Éric Pellet, Sandro Pierotti, Davide Racca, Giovanni Rimo, Simone Santi Gubini, Antonio Semerano, Zeno Tentella, Marco Vallesi, Francesca Vitale, Michele Zaffarano.

Proiezioni video:

Aetna/Ararat – di Massimo Corsaro e Marzia Andronico (2010)

Film Zero – di Marco Perri, con Marianna Adilardi (2010)

Aram vult nemus – di Giovanni Andrea Semerano, con Alfredo Anzellini (2010)

Performance teatrale:

Vocalica – di e con Marcello Sambati

Presentazione di:

Giuliano Mesa, Poesie 1973-2008, ed. La Camera Verde, Roma 2010

________________________________________________________________________________

info:

Inaugurazione della mostra
11 settembre 2010, ore 17.00

Piane di Bronzo, loc. Puntone San Pantaleo
Strada provinciale vetrallese, Tuscania (VT)
+39 0761 445040 / +39 347 2108126

La mostra è visitabile tutti i giorni
dall’11 settembre al 9 ottobre,
dalle ore 11.00 alle ore 13.00 e dalle ore 16.30 alle ore 20.30
(la mattina per appuntamento)
Tel.: 0761 4450040 / 347 2108126

www.darkcamera.it
via della lupa, 10, 01017 Tuscania, VT
+39 320 6909642

www.lacameraverde.com
via Giovanni Miani 20, 00154 Roma
+39 340 5263877
________________________________________________________________________________