Weiss, Irving, 1921-2021
Dates
- Existence: 1921 - 2021 June 21
Nationality
American
Found in 7 Collections and/or Records:
CORTEXt, 1995
Johanna Drucker contributes an introductory essay on historic aspects of visual poetry which is carried forth to multimedia information systems of today. She also was responsible for the cover design. Karl Young contributes an afterword in which he focuses on mail art. He particularly addresses his own, ongoing Shadow Project that refers to the faint traces people left on nearby surfaces after they were vaporized by the atomic bombs in Japan. Young indicates that d.a. levy stands out as the major figure in the last three decades who left an indelible inprint on underground publications and visual poetry. He also adds that Tom Phillips is the most complete book artist. The Sackner Archive partially funded this exhibition. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Visual Voices: Manuscript of Book Version / Weiss, Irving; Herbert G; Herrick R; Marvell A; Mallarme S; Blake W., 1994
Visual Voices: Manuscript of Unpublished Portion / Weiss, Irving; Blake W., 1994
These poems constitute those that were not used for the published book of Visual Voices. They have the same format as the published version, an introductory page (listed as laser generated, typed in media description) that provides an explanation and designation followed by Weiss' typewritten rearrangement presentation of the poem taken from classics. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Visual Voices; Reverberations: Night Mind Anthology pages 2-3 / Weiss, Irving., 1994
This poem appears to be a melange of Weiss' own poetry. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Visual Voices: The Poem As a Print Object / Weiss, Irving., 1994
This is a reprint of selected sections of the book with the same title. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Visual Voices: The Poem As a Print Object / Weiss, Irving ; Herbert G ; Marvell A ; Herrick R., 1994
Weiss defines concrete poetry as poetry "in which the word and sometimes the letter, and even unidentifiable but vaguely pseudo-alphabetical shapes become the basic element- syntax being mostly or entirely abandoned." In this volume, Weiss has rearranged, splintered, interfaced, shaped, cancelled conventional poetry composed by classic poets thereby "creating poems intended as self-conscious utterances whose purpose is to express the relation of traditional verse to its own medium of print." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Visual Voices: The Poem As a Print Object / Weiss, Irving ; Herbert G ; Marvell A ; Herrick R., 1994
Weiss defines concrete poetry as poetry "in which the word and sometimes the letter, and even unidentifiable but vaguely pseudo-alphabetical shapes become the basic element- syntax being mostly or entirely abandoned." In this volume, Weiss has rearranged, splintered, interfaced, shaped, cancelled conventional poetry composed by classic poets thereby "creating poems intended as self-conscious utterances whose purpose is to express the relation of traditional verse to its own medium of print." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Filtered By
- Subject: Critical text X
Additional filters:
- Subject
- Concrete poetry 3
- Typewriter poetry 2
- Fragmented text 1
- Visual poetry 1