Mail-art by IUOMA member meeah Williams (Brooklyn, New York, USA)
August 20, 2013 - I am thrilled to share with you this fantastic visual poetry with asemic writing sent by new friend meeah Williams in Brooklyn. meeah has been posting often literary, often witty and always insightful blogs at the IUOMA. Obviously blessed with a natural curiosity and inquiring intellect, she has been digging into mail-art history.
She has been discovering the various obscure forms and practices that flourish in the network but are little known elsewhere. These include asemics, concrete poetry, visual poetry, haptic poetry, object poetry and the general tendency to work with found materials, manifested recently in Trashpo. (Not to mention numerous visual art practice derived from DaDa and Fluxus.)
meeah is a quick study, indeed, as I understand she has not previously worked with these forms in any conscious or concerted way. The work above synthesizes text, image and shape as well asemic symbols into a fascinating field composition that displays a formal structure. This is a great example of a work that balances a certain degree of formalism with the organic. She also included a kind and compelling message on the reverse side:
meeah Williams raises numerous issues here that have relevance to many. At the core, I discern the beginning of a serious discussion about the role of the avant garde (or postavant as some have suggested) in challenging the constructs that enforce what is sometimes called "official" or "shared" reality and our role, or the lack of a role, in creating it.
She notes the asemic phenomenon. While "asemic writing" is a difficult concept, people seem to produce it, especially in childhood. Yet meeah's missive deserves a personal response, which I shall write, as I have now shared her thoughts with you.
meeah Williams has a very interesting blog - Red Ignatz Society - that has something to do with pataphysics (or something). I am beginning to think she must be a former Neoist, resurfacing as so many of them seem to be these days:
http://walkingeyeball.blogspot.com/
Mail-art by IUOMA member Michael Orr aka Pone (Clarkston, Georgia, USA)
I very much enjoy being a member of the Fluxus Poetry group at Flickr, hosted by the great visual poet Litsa Spathi. Over the course of time, I became intrigued by the work of another member who goes by the name Pone or Cornpone; and as one thing leads to another, I discovered these are mail-art monikers used by Michael Orr of Georgia, who is also an active IUOMA member. (I can be confused by multiple identities too but staunchly support the practice.)
Many friends are familiar with Michael's awesome collage work, often done using the digital (or hybrid digital) medium, which gives the work sharpness and clarity even when incredibly complex. So I was thrilled to receive this piece, which I present as the first part of a two-part series. Here is the reverse side:
The distinction between collage and visual poetry can be murky territory. I think Michael Orr is producing excellent vispo, and this piece is a good example. The work incorporates text masterfully and establishes image-language relationships as well as visual syntax.
Some elements, the top of the piece for example, are at least asemic suggestive. The language exploration continues on the reverse side, including the excellent "There/There" mirror image-redundancy; that in itself is a nice minimalist, concrete poem. Michael's work, as evidenced here, often has a self-referential quality: The text commenting on text concept so evident in postmodernism (pomo). Here is a detail scan:
For me, the frequent references to the eye in this fragment can, among other possibilities, cause the reader to meditate upon visual perception and the nature of "reading" itself in the context of the work. Also included was this found bag, which the recipient might or might not associate with the collage:
And the reverse:
Michael Orr has certainly achieved a highly individualistic synthesis of the DaDa, Fluxus, Absurdist strain in mail-art. He also included an add-and-pass sheet:
I have seen this guy's pic before. Is this Ross Priddle? I used to think (seriously) it was Moan Lisa. Here is the reverse, ready for a contribution and to be mailed:
And all of this enclosed in a great envelope:
Many thanks to Michael Orr for this astonishing work (I am running our of complimentary words)!
See more work by Michael Orr at:
Dark wall's mail-art mystery
Dark wall received some fantastic mail-art from a secret admirer for the MinXus-Lynxus blog. The question is, who made it?
Comment
Thanks Susan. I am not suggesting anything really. The only person I know who has expressed a liking for Mel Ramos (& Mel Ramos is a really fine pop artist, among other things) is David Stafford. But David has never had any interest in Dw or Slim Jims. Oh well.
meeah, that is a priceless response. You are on the top of my list as a dialogue writer if I can find funding for my planned remake of The Big Sleep.
Did you grow up in Brooklyn or just acquire the attitude, as if it were in the water :)? Your comment made my day; I'm still chuckling.
The great mail-artist David Berube has been posting daily shots on Facebook of the Empire State Building via Long Island City (that is SO Andy Warhol). I wrote to him: "I'm up here with the cows. At least I can see what it looks like down there from the streets."
The thing that we have in common is that even NY cows have bad attitudes. What's that joke about still getting the milk?
But seriously, deciding whether to open the blog with you or Michael Orr caused me great angst. How could I put two such amazing talents together? I thought of conventional wisdom: "Ladies before gentlemen" and "age before beauty"? Which one did I choose? It was a hard call. Someone has to make them.
Thanks to you both. I enjoyed putting this together. And the fake Mel Ramos was an even greater bonus.
Hi Cerulean, the mystery art definitely copies the style of Mel Ramos - good eye. Dark wall's favourite snack is Slim Jim - a kind of processed meat aka Beef Jerky. Mel Ramos never did any pieces with Slim Jim. So this is a very, very clever copy. Thanks!
Mel Ramos?
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