Ultra-Lettrist

The Ultra-Lettrist movement was an art form developed by Jean-Louis Brau, Gil J Wolman, and François Dufrêne, in the 1950s, when they split from Isidore Isou's Lettrism.

They issued a periodical called grammeS: Review of the Ultra-Lettriste Group, which ran for seven issues between 1957 and 1961. They used their journal to publish hypergraphics which included exchanges and discussions with the Lettrists' Poésie Nouvelle and the Situationist International.

Some Ultra-Lettrists went on to form the Nouveau réalisme school while others joined the Situationist International.[1]

Other Ultra-Lettrists

gollark: I've decided to switch to having 32 registers, so there should be room for useful* features like the metaprogramcounter.
gollark: It does mean that you need self-modifying code to subtract non-constant numbers, but such is the price of such elegance.
gollark: This is how I merged `MOV` (in the sense of "set register to fixed value") and `ADD`.
gollark: See, there are exactly 16 registers, one of which, r0, always contains 0, and one of which, rf, is the program counter, and many of the instructions take a 4-bit value representing which register to pull from.
gollark: <@!330678593904443393> You would pass it 6 register indices.

References

  1. Craig J. Saper (2001) Networked art pp 112 U of Minnesota Press ISBN 0-8166-3707-5 Retrieved 2010, May 17
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