Fluxus poetry

Fluxus poetry is normally created during a performance, an essential difference with visual poetry. The result of the performance can be a text, a visual poem, etc.

Background

Dick Higgins was one of the leading Fluxus (an international artistic group) people, who also published his concrete poetry and invented the term "intermedia".[1]

Litsa Spathi developed the concept of Fluxus poetry where the performance itself creates the result, a Fluxus poem. With the use of computers, a new result is generated after each performance. It is characterized by very quick cuts, that is several images per second, by wit, by the use of letters as a substitute for words. When the result is a video, appropriate minimalist music is added.

Fluxus poetry is published by the Fluxus Heidelberg Center that is run by Litsa Spathi and Ruud Janssen and is located in Heidelberg, Germany.

gollark: This seems very poorly designed but I can't (be bothered to) work out enough of its structure to say.
gollark: It's nim's vector type.
gollark: Ah, there's one bit of code which actually does (for some reason?) do mid-list removals!
gollark: Did this person REALLY reimplement `join`, but wrong?
gollark: Wow, this code is awful in almost every way.

See also

References

  1. Hirsch, Edward ' A Poet's Glossary' Houghton Mifflin Harcourt New York 2024=ISBN 9780151011957


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.