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Concrete poetry

 Subject
Subject Source: Sackner Database

Found in 38 Collections and/or Records:

10 poemi collazionati / Belloli, Carlo; Bense M; Pavanello G., 1996

 Item
Identifier: CC-37633-39490
Scope and Contents

The meaning of the concrete poems that are printed on different colored paper stock is enigmatic. The tipped-in sheet reproduces an essay on Belloli's work by Max Bense. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1996

Affiche: Apresfiche. No.23/Jul / Max Bense., 1961

 Item
Identifier: CC-25106-25559
Scope and Contents

This is an issue printed after the regular run of the periodical that ended with No.22. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1961

Approach Magazine. No.2 / Gilbert Ryle, editor ; Bann S ; Houedard DS ; Cobbing B ; Bense M ; Jandl E ; Ulrichs T ; Ruhm G ; Chopin H ; DeVree P ; Heidsieck B ; Furnival J ; Finlay IH ; Cox K ; Valoch J., 1968

 Item
Identifier: CC-24819-25272
Scope and Contents This issue includes a Glyn Pursglove's essay, "An Introduction to Concrete Poetry." He states "The phrase 'Concrete Poetry' is bandied about a great deal in a way which seems to suggest that all those to whom it is applied are part of a conscious, united movement, and that they are artists whose work is dictated by a set of common and explicit principles. As anyone with any understanding of artistic 'movements' will readily imagine, this is a superficial and misleading idea. Certainly there have been plenty of explicit statements by some of the poets involved but these have, naturally, attracted as many opponents as supporters. One of the most important of such statements was 'POSITION 1 of International (Movement) for Spatial Poetries" organised by, among others, Pierre Gamier. This was not quite a manifesto, in the sense of a document proclaiming plans for the future, but rather a formalisation of a situation. Gamier was fully conscious of the difficulties, and his closing words...
Dates: 1968

Between Poetry and Painting Chronology / Houedard, Dom Sylvester; Bense M., 1965

 Item
Identifier: CC-09089-9268
Scope and Contents

Handwritten corrections and additions were made by Max Bense. Stored together with other Archival materials for this catalogue. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1965

Bucher Blatter Bedrucktes / Meyer, Fredi G. ; Frank, Karlhans ; Bense M ; Burkhardt K ; Kriwet F ; Dienst KP ; Frank K ; Mazer H., 1965

 Item
Identifier: CC-05846-5956
Scope and Contents

Includes announcements of various publications by Edition Hansjorg Mayer. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1965

Concrete Poetry from East and West Germany: The Language of Exemplarism and Experimentalism / Gumpel, Liselotte ; cummings ee ; Bense M ; Achleitner F ; Arp H ; Artmann HC ; Ball H ; Bann S ; Benn G ; Bobrowski J ; Bremer C ; Brock B ; DeCampos A ; Cage J ; Claus CF ; VanDoesburg T ; Duchamp M ; Enzensberger HM ; Gappmayr H ; Gomringer E ; Heissenbuttel H ; Herzfelde W ; Holz A ; Jandl E ; KIrsch S ; Kriwet F ; Mallarme S ; Marti K ; Marinetti FT ; Mon F ; Mayer HJ ; Morgenstern C ; Roth D ; Ruhm G ; Russolo L ; Saussure F ; Schauffelen KB ; Schmidt SJ ; Schwitters K ; Solt ME ; Spoerri D ; Soto J ; Stockhausen K ; Thomkins A ; Ulrichs T ; Walther E ; Wezel W ; Wiener O ; Williams E ; Williams J ; Wittgenstein L., 1976

 Item
Identifier: CC-52893-74031
Scope and Contents

Description of book from the inside dust jacket: "Liselotte Gumpel brings to her interpretation of these two strains of poetry a solid grounding in language and cultural history as well as fresh and unbiased perceptions about the poems themselves. She offers historical background, draws connections with literary concretism's antecedents in visual arts and music, and usefully applies the semiotics of Max Bense and C.S.Peirce in her descriptions of the "dicentic genres" of the East and the "rhematic connexes" of the West. Under the rubrics of teleological humanism and creative zest she explores the shaping traditions of the two movements. A chapter on significant anthologies from East and West Germany concludes her survey." The dust jacket depicts a mandala by Kriwet that Gumpel characterizes as a "Round Disc." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1976

Die Prazisen Vergnugen: Versuche und Modelle / Bense, Max., 1968

 Item
Identifier: CC-20912-21321
Scope and Contents

Also designated Limes Nova 1. This is the second edition of the book first published in 1964. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1968

Edition Hansjorg Mayer / Backworks ; Reichardt J ; Cremer S ; Dohl R ; Bense M ; Mayer HJ ; Nake F ; Schmidt W ; Vieira M., 1978

 Item
Identifier: CC-31180-32648
Scope and Contents

Provides list of publications by Hansjorg Mayer. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1978

futura: Tallose Berge. No.3 / Max Bense., 1965

 Item
Identifier: CC-27462-28510
Scope and Contents

The title of this poem in English is up and down a steep river bank. The poem includes the Spanish word 'rio' for river as well as oro meaning gold with permutations of these letters shaped to suggest the river lapping against the bank that also contains gold. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1965

klankteksten ?konkrete poezie visuele teksten Exhibition: jetzt und jetzte. No.158 / Max Bense., 1970

 Item
Identifier: CC-38267-40163
Scope and Contents

This poster was hung in the most important exhibition of concrete poetry in its time. The numbering scheme used to classify the posters is based upon the pages of the exhibition catalogue with the same title. In this case, the poster was not depicted in the catalogue and the page reference is to Bense's biography. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 1970