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Critical text

 Subject
Subject Source: Sackner Database

Found in 3 Collections and/or Records:

CORTEXt, 1995

 Item
Identifier: CC-29033-30371
Scope and Contents

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.

Dates: 1995

Giordano Bruno and the Geometry of Language / Saiber, Arielle ; Accame V ; Adorno T ; Carroll L ; Drucker J ; Higgins D ; Joyce J ; Perec G ; Pignotti L ; Queneau R ; Severini G ; Williams E., 2005

 Item
Identifier: CC-44642-46806
Scope and Contents

In the introduction, Saiber describes Bruno as a 16th century polymath who was a philosopher, poet, playwright, mnemonist and magus but at his core an architect of ideas. Saiber further adds that "Many among the educated class familiar with esoteric learning, like Bruno, looked to locate and empower themselves through spacial manipulation and symbloic permutation, such as memory theaters. encyclopedias, kabbalah, natural magic, alchemy, and searches for the 'perfect language.' Bruno's writing indeed contains verbal patterns that signal an unusual sensibility to the shape of of space - whether of the heavens, between people, on a page, or of one's mind." -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates: 2005