Daniels, David, 1933 October 11-
Dates
- Existence: 19331011
Found in 24 Collections and/or Records:
Alan Sondheim 1958 - ; 5: Sound / Daniels, David; Sondheim A., 2004
This poem depicts a highly stylized figure with a crown above a black space where the face should be. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Jim Andrews, 2004
This poem depicts an abstract rectangular image. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Kenneth Goldsmith 1961 - / Daniels, David; Goldsmith K., 2004
The shape of the poem is in the form of a silhouetted suit with Goldsmith's head depicted by the title of the poem. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Mark Peters 1972 - / Daniels, David., 2004
Mez / Daniels, David., 2004
There are several large shaped poems within this work, e.g., a fish, vase, and apple. The text is bawdy, e.g., sheep's cunt is a frequent phrase. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Muslih Al Din Saadi of Shiraz 1190 - 1290 / Daniels, David., 2004
The image of this poem is that of a highly stylized figure with a Fez on his head. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Part One of the poem The Gates of Paradise: The Breath Garden Entrance: Explores Breath / Daniels, David., 2007
Publii Ovidi Naseris 43 B.C. -18 A.D.; Metamorphoses: Narcissus / Daniels, David., 2004
Reading from his Poem: The Gates of Paradise / David Daniels., 2001
The disc records Daniels reading his poems. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
Stars Shine Bright on Shattered Light / Daniels, David., 2007
The Books Lost to the Fire in the Library of Alexandria Revealed Gate, 2001
In Daniels' book, "The Gates of Paradise," this poem is printed on page 19. The shape of the poem appears to be a Greek temple with columns. The titles of the books listed in the poem are made-up raunch phrases, several well known in old and ancient jokes, e.g, "The Yellow River by I.P. Daily; The Aged Car by Denton Fender; The Random Jockstrap by Wun Hung Lo etc. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
The Club Ha Ha Gate, 2001
The Gates of Paradise / Daniels, David ; Ouspensky P., 2000
The Gates of Paradise / Daniels, David ; Ouspensky P., 2000
The Heroic yet Deeply Art-Deco Transformation of a Top Notch Plastic Surgeon's Plastic Arts Challenged Trophy Wife a Neo-Poussin Landscape Gate / Daniels, David., 2001
In Daniels' book, "The Gates of Paradise," this poem is printed on sequential pages 289-290. The shape of the poem is a female figure seen from behind with a helmut on her head. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
The Light Gate, 2001
In Daniels' book, "The Gates of Paradise," this poem is printed on sequential pages 167-171. The shape of the poem consists of five poems with abstract shapes. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
The Multi-Wing Multi-Being Multi-Sing Gate, 2001
In Daniels' book, "The Gates of Paradise," this poem is printed on page 43. The shape of the poem is a dragonfly viewed from above and this mentioned in the concluding phrase, "Stars shine bright on shatter light fate twitch wings finning out inner atmosphere character. Thee.The. That's go with the flow of the delicate Herakleition transparent inner stratasphere dragonfly light wings, folks." The dragonfly's body consists of rhyming nonsense words. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
The Paean to Various New, 2001
In Daniels' book, "The Gates of Paradise," this poem is printed on page 8. The shape is that of the lower half of a New York man's body peeing on the sidewalk. The last word of the title together with the urinary stream documents this shape, "New Yorkers Pissing on the Sidewalk." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
The Petit Eternal Return Gate, 2001
In Daniels' book, "The Gates of Paradise," this poem is printed on page 11. The shape is a mandala that surrounds a triangle (from the words in the poem, this signifies a pubic triangle). -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.
The Self-Portrait Gate, 2001
In Daniels' book, "The Gates of Paradise," this poem is printed on facing pages 40-41. The shape of the poem is a caricatured face in profile on the left page with a cartoon bubble idea on the right page. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.