Thursday, July 29, 2021

"ORDEN: lunar (variations)" collabs by Jim Leftwich & De Villo Sloan (July 2021)


"ORDEN: lunar" collab by Jim Leftwich (Virginia, USA) 

& De Villo Sloan (New York, USA) (July 2021)






"processed lunar panZemic synth " collab by Jim Leftwich (Virginia, USA) 

& De Villo Sloan (New York, USA) (July 2021)





"ORDEN: lunar" collab by Jim Leftwich 

& De Villo Sloan (July 2021)





 "ORDEN: lunar" collab by Jim Leftwich  

& De Villo Sloan (New York, USA)





"collab" by Jim Leftwich & De Villo Sloan 








Monday, July 26, 2021

Anhinga Press Announces Forthcoming Publication of Major Asemic Collection by Karla Van Vliet


Cover of She Speaks Tongues Poems Asemic Writing by Karla Van Vliet
 scheduled for release November 2021 by Anhinga Press


Anhinga Press has announced the publication of a major collection of art, writing and asemics by Vermont USA visual artist and writer Karla Van Vliet. According to the press announcement, She Speaks Tongues will be released in November 2021. Deepest thanks to the press for sharing a proof with Asemic Front 2. Further information about the book is available directly from Anhinga Press:



Karla Van Vliet is a past AF2 contributor. She is gaining an attentive following in the visual poetry and asemic communities. Many of her pieces offer variations on a binary structure she favors: an asemic glyph & then asemics in a calligraphic style. (For the true asemic structuralists, Van Vliet's binary pieces have an affinity to Thierry Tillier's (Belgium) two-part compositions.) This new book, however, departs from asemic formalism and focuses on Van Vliet's expressive power.

The 68 pages of her book (current projection) and its 25 spectacular plates provide the first considered gathering of asemic work by this important artist.

- De Villo Sloan



From She Speaks Tongues by Karla Van Vliet
 scheduled for release November 2021 by Anhinga Press






From She Speaks Tongues by Karla Van Vliet












"untitled collab" by Kristine Snodgrass & De Villo Sloan (July 25, 2021)


 "untitled collab" by Kristine Snodgrass & De Villo Sloan 
(snail mail July 25, 2021)





Saturday, July 24, 2021

Sunday, July 18, 2021

Saturday, July 17, 2021

Concrete Poetry Meets Random Number Generator in "experiment in o" by Rebecca Resinski

 


experiment in o by Rebecca Resinski (Cuckoo Grey 2020)



Rebecca Resinski (Arkansas, USA) has contributed her work faithfully to Asemic Front 2. During the time she has participated in the project, she has published notable work steadily here & at other venues. 

Resinski is increasingly recognized as one of the "Neo-Concrete" or "New Concrete" poets in addition to her other writing & art, which (as I have written before here at AF2) is to me a very original merging of the postavant & the Classical. She has been of particular importance to the AF2 goal of exploring relationships between concrete poetry & asemics. 

Rebecca Resinski also effortlessly combines the practical materialism of a concretiste with the abstraction of a conceptualist. In experiments in o she displays her talent for weaving intricate & precise structures of "pattern poetry" (see Dick Higgins' extraordinary book). 

In experiment in o, Resinski uses a random number generator to make crucial decisions determining the changing visual appearance of the 18 squares that define the structure of the series. 

Certainly concrete poetry requires the same commitment to constraint as Oulipo, a kind of hyper-formalism. This might help explain a resurgence in conventional concrete poetry among the same new writers & artists who are flocking to the sometimes obsessive-compulsive confines of Oulipo. (And as a deconstructive thread: I think experiment in o offers more promise for psycho-analytic interpretation than her previous books.)   

Resinski's collection has a total of six panels, each bearing three squares. By introducing the notion of absence, Resinski focuses experiment in o on - in a philosophical sense - the relationship of the sign to absence or nothingness (rather than the relationship of the sign to other signs). In fact, Resinski reduces her arsenal of signs to one = o, which hovers dangerously close to "signifying nothing." 

In his recent writing - some posted here at AF2 - Jim Leftwich has explained that an authentic asemic writing could only signify nothing, endlessly & might not even be possible from a linguistic standpoint. Terms such as indeterminate & pansemic are far more useful; we have many. 

Yet currently across the globe numerous individuals are fascinated - held in thrall - with the "asemic" concept of signs that express nothing or are devoid of meaning wholly. Asemic consciousness, apparently, requires the initiate to float in a state of paradox & contradiction like the rigors of Buddhist meditation. More on this later with proper cites & considerations.  

In the meantime, Rebecca Resinski has released a new book that explores with originality & innovation the borderlands & miraged wastes of textual nothingness.

- De Villo Sloan





e
xperiment in o by Rebecca Resinski




e
xperiment in o by Rebecca Resinski








experiment in o by Rebecca Resinski









Wednesday, July 14, 2021

Epistemology 609: ORDEN I by Jim Leftwich & De Villo Sloan

 "Epistemology 609: ORDEN I" by Jim Leftwich & De Villo Sloan (2015-2021)



 "Epistemology 609: ORDEN I" by Jim Leftwich & De Villo Sloan (detail)








Recent Asemic Texts & Art by Kristine Snodgrass


"Red" by Kristine Snodgrass (2021)





"Cleft & Lurch" by Kristine Snodgrass (2021)





"Cy Twombly Exercise" by Kristine Snodgrass 
(melted pastels) (2021)






Kristine Snodgrass portrait by Collin J Rae










Thursday, July 8, 2021

David-Baptiste Chirot @ Asemic Front (part 1)

 



The visual poetry & asemic writing communities are mourning the loss of David-Baptiste Chirot (aka David Chirot) in 2021. 

Visual poet & theorist Tom Hibbard was there in Wisconsin to help usher D-B C through the darkest of times. Kudos to Tom to go through that rarest of melancholy: The death of a poet. Matthew Stolte was also there to help - deepest thanks. As far as I know, these were the last members of our community to see David.

Participants in the Asemic Front Project know David-Baptiste Chirot was a visual poet of great achievement. He has contributed to our theoretical foundation & artistic practice. Indeed, without the breakthroughs David made that pushed visual poetry to new levels of expression, AF could not exist. He has made significant contributions to the asemic writing movement as well. 

David has been a longtime contributor to Asemic Front. So I am taking this sad event as an impetus to gather all his AF contributions & re-post them for all interested in his work. Feel free to copy, share. 

The irony is that David & I discussed ways to find a central location for his work, which is voluminous & widely dispersed. Obviously, I had no solution. I hope in some small way that I can remain true to the belief he knows I have in his work.

- De Villo Sloan


At the Edge of & Outside of Language: 
David Chirot on the origin of rubBEings

(originally published in Asemic Front, December 18, 2017)


When I first began creating rubBEings I had a vision - a kind of deep emotional, visual thinking, which I longed to convey. But I did not know if I would ever be able to realize it. I wanted to express that vision in a way that conveyed what I was experiencing at the edge of and outside of words, letters and language

I kept trying to realize that vision until one day when I was making art working on a telephone pole. I was surrounded by a street gang that later killed one of my friends. At the time various people were living in a nearby building later condemned by the city. I lived on the top floor that was reserved for homeless people and spent a whole winter there. Snow came in the broken windows and killed mice, which terrified the psychotic patients that shared the floor with the homeless.

I was working away on the telephone pole and suddenly making a stroke with a lumber crayon on cheap notebook paper I realized I was crossing a line. I was no longer just making markings but actually doing what I had envisioned but had not been sure I could achieve. Now I was achieving it. In that one stroke I changed from being a wanderer to having a vocation: visual poetry, writing, sound poetry – the rest of my existence here.

- David Chirot



By David-Baptiste Chirot




Inner pages of an asemic book by David Chirot





"For Bob Cobbing in the Snow" (remix) by David Chirot