Maintenant #69 – Márton Koppány
An interview with Márton Koppány by SJ Fowler:
http://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/maintenant-69-marton-koppany/
An interview with Márton Koppány by SJ Fowler:
http://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/maintenant-69-marton-koppany/
the SCRIPTjr.nl Flickr photstream ( http://www.facebook.com/l/KAQAJ3dSbAQDtakK4TNqGAqQ3dCW5svAae6zf3pcsoxhabw/www.flickr.com/photos/scriptjrnl/) and YouTube channel ( http://www.facebook.com/l/MAQBLlUfbAQCfsa-mspDZ2YpOuowGKReko0CFi4G_f_8e6A/www.youtube.com/user/SCRIPTjrnl) continually push work live.
As you find random pieces of asemic work and/or graffiti, and capture images and/or videos of them, feel free to send them along to SCRIPTjr.nl for integration.
here: http://www.thelastvispo.com/2011/03/10/151/
Editors Crag Hill and Nico Vassilakis present, in conjunction with contributor James Yeary, a cut-up collage of words from essays from the anthology at the Avant Symposium last year at Ohio State University in Columbus.
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NO THEME – NO FEES – NO JURY – NO REWARD – NO RETURN – NO RESTRICTIONS – NO DO & DON’Ts – NO NO’s
just sent your stuff before september 2011 to :
please add a name and / or any additional info that you want to be shown online and/or offline – anonymous contributions will be shown as well
[please spread this message widely]
Martino Oberto passed away yesterday, June 22nd, 2011.
Born in 1925, Oberto (“O.M.”) was a visual poet, asemic writer, anarchist, anartist, founder of the seminal vispo mag “Ana etcetera” (1958-70). His works have been exposed in solo and collective shows (with Munari, Dorfles, Fontana and many others) from the 50s up to now. He also made experimental movies, and wrote philosophical essays about writing & art. He lived in New York for a decade or so, then came back to Genoa in the 90s. His visions and projects of “powerless words” and “anart” [something like “anti-art”] are absolutely relevant, right now, even if they belong to his 1968 short movie “Before anarchism (freedom from culture)”.
Here are a few links: http://eexxiitt.blogspot.com/2011/06/martino-oberto-1925-2011.html