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Bann, Stephen, 1942-

 Person

Dates

  • Existence: 1942-08-01-

Found in 83 Collections and/or Records:

Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art Sundial: Umbra Solis Non Aeris / Finlay, Ian Hamilton; Harvey, Michael; Paterson, Dave; Bann, Stephen., 1976

 Item
Identifier: CC-12022-12245
Scope and Contents

This depicts a photograph of a sundial sited at the museum. The drawing for this work is also held by the Sackner Archive. The motto refers to the fact that it is the "golden sun" that is the origin of the shadow which indicates the solar hour. This work is also depicted in Bulletin of the National Galleries of Scotland No.3, a pamphlet periodical held by the Sackner Archive. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1976

Seashells / Finlay, Ian Hamilton; Procter, Ian; Costley, Ron; Bann S., 1971

 Item
Identifier: CC-11863-12084
Scope and Contents

The essay written by Stephen Bann on the back inside folder explains the metaphor of grouping designs of hulls of sailing ships like sea shells in a display case. Proctor is a ship designer and Costley the artist who made this print. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1971

Some Myths of Concrete Poetry / Cobbing, Bob; Mayer, Peter; Chopin H; Bann S; Finlay IH; Mills S; Belloli C; Finch P; Gomringer E; Wright E; Fahlstrom O; Themerson S; Jandl E; Morgan E; Furnival J., 1972

 Item
Identifier: CC-17728-18097
Scope and Contents

Reprinted from Stereo Headphones No.5, 1972. The authors debunk the assertion of Stuart Mills who in Akros No.18, 1972 stated that the poem-poster was introduced by Ian-Hamilton Finlay. They go on to further describe the pioneers of Concrete Poetry in their opinion. Rebuttals to their conclusions by Stephan Bann and Henri Chopin are also published. Mentions that Ernest Fenellosa, who died in 1908, used the term 'concrete poetry' in an essay, 'The Chinese Character as a Medium for Poetry' in 1901. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1972

st. eeples / Bann, Stephen., 1968

 Item
Identifier: CC-22542-22967
Scope and Contents

*WEB 1998. [Email]seamus.cooney@wmich.edu. My copy says it's published by Tarasque Press. Sackner: no identification of publisher on my copy of card but similar Bann cards were also published by Tarasque Press so that correction is accepted. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1968

[thanks ica] / Houedard, Dom Sylvester; Bann S; Finlay IH; Finlay S; Sharkey W ; Burroughs WS; Trocchi A; Nuttall J; Picard T., 1966

 Item
Identifier: CC-56717-10000101
Scope and Contents

This typed message continues "mrs sharkeys book is EXCELLENT" -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1966

The Blue and Brown Poems / Ian Hamilton Finlay; J Williams; S Bann; M Weaver., 1968

 Item
Identifier: CC-12349-12575
Scope and Contents

Calendar design was done by Herbert M. Rosenthal. Consists of one poem print per month with a critical analysis by Stephen Bann on an accompanying page. The poems include ho/horizon, ajar, net/net, cork/net, acrobats, wave/rock, green waters, you/me, broken/heartbroken, wind/wind, ring of waves, and le circus. In the 1990 Finlay bibliography, a set of 12 framed poems from this calendar was offered for $3200 (calendar is out of print). -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1968

The Tradition of Constructivism / Bann, Stephen, editor ; Puni I ; Lissitzky E ; Chernikov I ; Martin K ; Hausmann R ; Biederman C ; Hill A., 1974

 Item
Identifier: CC-23036-23473
Scope and Contents

This book is one of a series from "The Documents of 20th-century Art," in which originals or English translations of artistic documents are reproduced. It contains a section, "Constructivism and the Little Magazines: 1923-24," which provides articles from Lef, G, Disk, and Blok. It includes an essay by I.K. Bonset (Van Doesberg) entitled "Toward a Constructivist Poetry." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1974

Thermidor, 1994

 Item — Box 147: [Barcode: 31858072458007]
Identifier: CC-12767-13032
Scope and Contents

Stephan Bann provides an explanation of the poem in the accompanying leaflet as follows. Thermidor was the month in the French Revolutionary calendar when the summer heat was its most intense, and the grain at its ripest. It was also the month, in 1794, when Robespierre and his followers met their deaths at the guillotine. In the image of this poem, the abrupt cleavage of the word, THER MIDOR, and of the figured sheaf of flowers, suggest the termination of the revolution in its Jacobian sense. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1994

Additional filters:

Subject
Concrete poetry 40
Critical text 28
Documentation 16
Picture poetry 15
Conventional poetry 14