Mail Art « POETICKS

Archive for the ‘Mail Art’ Category

Entry 1282 — Mail Art from Blorchistan

Tuesday, November 26th, 2013

Mail Art not from the SASE project but a one-only from Ficus stranguensis:

MailArtFromThe PanjandrumOfBlorchistan

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Entry 1272 — Back in My Usual Zone

Sunday, November 17th, 2013

Here’s an SASE from Australia I don’t think I posted before:

CharlesRoberts

I’m still organizing mine house, but from the Null Zone now.  Hence, the return to SASEs.

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Entry 1263 — Back to the SASE Mail Art Show

Friday, November 8th, 2013

This SASE is from Teresinka Pereira:

TeresinkaPereiraFront

TeresinkaPereiraBack

Meanwhile, I am again I am deep in the null zone again, aided by the update to my Windows 8. which I never should have downloaded.

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Entry 1245 — An SASE from Brooklyn

Wednesday, October 16th, 2013

It’s by Gerard Barbot:

GerardBarbotFront

 

GerardBarbotBack

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Entry 1244 — The Trip Beginneth

Tuesday, October 15th, 2013

My friend Marty will be picking me up and taking me to the Greyhound depot at 11:40, about an hour-and-a-half from now.  I’m half dreading it, half excited by the trip it beginneth.  I’m all set, except for a shower.

I decided to do two more SASE entries before leaving, then I’ll probably miss anywhere from 5 to 8 days.  The two SASEs, by the way, may be repeats.  I don’t think I’ve already posted them but haven’t time to check.  Today’s is from State of Being:

StateOfBeingFront

StateOfBeingBack

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Entry 1238 — The Inexhaustible Mail Art Show

Wednesday, October 9th, 2013

I thought Crag has really taken advantage of being curator when I saw this SASE, but it’s from Chris Hill, not Crag:

ChrisHillFront

 

ChrisHillBack

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Entry 1237 — 2 More SASEs

Tuesday, October 8th, 2013

Crag Hill’s third and one by Glenn Helm:

CragFlowChartSASE

 

GlennHelm

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Entry 1235 — My Memory

Sunday, October 6th, 2013

I’m wondering if my memory is shot.  Today I forgot to post an entry here until past ten at night.  I wondered all day why the mailman didn’t pick up the letter in my mailbox, too–and forgot I was supposed to phone my sister this afternoon.  Ridiculous.  And I had a terrific poem from Marton for display.  That I will post tomorrow rather than now because I want to spend some time to discuss it.  Right now, though, I want to get my entry out of the way as fast as possible, so I can go back to bed.  Ergo, here is an SASE from J. F. Rochard:

JFRochard

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Entry 1234 — Mail Art Show, Still Running!

Saturday, October 5th, 2013

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I suspect this time my brain won’t recover.  In any case, all I have, again, is an SASE from the mail art show.  Hey, I just clicked “mail art,” which is one of my blog’s categories, and got all the SASEs I’ve posted so far–coming one after the other, they are really neat!  I was going through them to see if today’s was a repeater.  Apparently not.  It’s from Les Cammer:
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LesCammerFront

 

LesCammerBack

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xanga analyzer

Entry 1233 — Rescued by an SASE

Friday, October 4th, 2013

I was in bed for the night just now (at nine, my usual bedtime), when I realized I hadn’t posted an blog entry for today! I’ve been very absent-minded since my surgical procedure on Monday. I hope that’s due to the anaesthesia I was given. In any case, thank goodness I still have contributions to the SASE mail art show Crag Hill sent me to draw on, such as this one from Crag himself, his second in the show:

Crag#2Front

 

Crag#2Back

 

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Jump-Cut Poetry « POETICKS

Archive for the ‘Jump-Cut Poetry’ Category

Entry 1282 — Mail Art from Blorchistan

Tuesday, November 26th, 2013

Mail Art not from the SASE project but a one-only from Ficus stranguensis:

MailArtFromThe PanjandrumOfBlorchistan

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Entry 1281 — Ficus s., Continued

Tuesday, November 26th, 2013

Included in a letter I got from Ficus strangulensis in 2011:

OneDayCalvinProblem
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Entry 960 — Jump-Cut Poetry

Saturday, December 22nd, 2012

 

The following is a passage from John Cage’s “Writing for the first time through Howl” (1986) which I appropriated from Marjorie Perloff’s essay at The Boston Review website:

I think Perloff considers this a conceptual poem.  To me it’s a simple jump-cut poem, a “jump-cut” in my poetics being defined as “a movement in a text from one idea, image or the like to another with no syntactical bridge between the two.”  Thinking about it, I came to the (tentative) conclusion that there are two kinds of (effective) jump-cut poems: (1) procedure-generated ones and (2) moodscape-generated ones.  There is just one kind of ineffective jump-cut poem, ones that are neither (1) or (2).  Wholly random or essentially random because excessively hermetic crap, in other words.

While into a classifying mood, I divided All of Poetry into (1)  Subject-Centered Poetry  (what a poem is about) and (2) Technique-Centered Poetry  (how a poem is made), with “subject” defined as a combinationof the nature of the subject and the poet’s attitude toward it (tone).  Style I consider a technique.

While thinking about many of the comments at The Boston Review website about binaries, I formed one of my own: “Dichotiphobia vs. Rationality.”  Further thinking about a few of those comments, and many I’ve been assaulted by, inspired the following observation: “What I notice more and more in discussions of poetry or poetics is how many involved in them prefer not to attack opinions they oppose but the motives of those expressing those opinions.”

I don’t have a high opinion of the Cage passage, by the way.  Amusing, and occasionally a juxtapositioning makes something fun happen, but . . .   Perloff makes a big deal of its use of appropriation, and it is true that a good deal of what effectiveness it has is due to the way it procedure leads to the randomization of the order of its little locutions–which nonetheless make surprising off-the-wall sense.  This, as I suggested long ago while discussing Doris Cross, a superior employer of appropriations Perloff should be more familiar with than she seems to be, conveys a reassuring sense of Nature’s being rational, of something’s being behind it all that unifies our existence’s apparent meaninglessness.  No matter how you cut up and re-organize something like Ginsberg’s “Howl,” you’ll never get rid of words’ magical ability to mean.  Nor, analogically, of the universe’s.

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