RECEIVED: Fluxus Chicago from Skybridge Studios (USA), Vispo from Guido Bitossi (Italy) & Is Jim Dine the Original Visual Poet?

Stamp from Fluxus Fest 2011 sent by IUOMA member Skybridge Studios (North Manchester, Indiana, USA)


December 9, 2011 - In a previous blog I wrote about a series of Fluxus events held across the U.S.A. in 2011, including activities in Chicago. Good friend Skybridge Studios surprised me with this wonderful stamp that is on the reverse side of a large Chicago Fluxus poster from the event. I have no idea how she got it. I am certainly thrilled to have it. Due to scanner challenges, I had to break the poster image in half:


Many of you know Keith A. Buchholz (St. Louis, Missouri, USA) is an important Fluxus artist working today. He is an IUOMA member and active in mail-art. He is linked to the theme: "Fluxus never sleeps." In fact, I think he never sleeps, organizing and participating in events all over the world. He recently curated the George Maciunas show in Lithuania that included work by many friends here.


http://www.bienale.lt/2011/?p=371&lang=en


The poster was designed by our own Ginny Lloyd (Florida, USA). I am less familiar with Picasso Gaglione; maybe someone can fill me in.  Here's the second half of the poster:


I just could not make Chicago in the depths of winter last year and deeply regret it.  From accounts I have read, there was an emphasis on performance scores and performances; it must have been fascinating. I have discovered, however, that the event will be offered again in 2012. You can find information on the December 2, 2011 entry for Fluxlist:


http://fluxlist.blogspot.com/


Here's the address portion of the mailing:



Again, Lisa, my deepest thanks.


Guido Bitossi is a new friend from Rome, Italy. I know nothing about him except that he has a blog (contact provided later) that has Fluxus material, work by John M. Bennett, and a link to Ben Vautier, among other interesting things. I recently received an envelope from him that marks the beginning of our correspondence. Inside is concrete poetry/wordplay he has hand-written:



Italy is a powerhouse for concrete and visual poetry. I notice there is a tendency toward hand-written work far more than you see in the United States.  I like Guido's piece because it is far closer to conventional verse than most of the work we are used to seeing. In mail-art vispo, it is more likely language will be estranged from content and transformed into a kind of raw visual material. Guido reminds us of the full range of possibilities, including a move toward poetry in the literary tradition rather than away from it. His envelope has some interesting asemic or automatic writing included:




I am grateful for your friendship, Guido. I look forward to becoming more familiar with your work and trading mail-art. Keep an eye Guido Bitossi's blog for sure:


http://mailartrubbish.blogspot.com/


So is Jim Dine the original visual poet?


First, geez, no I did not receive mail-art from legendary artist Jim Dine. I doubt he would know what to make of a shred of DK's shirt. A recent entry on the exceptional blog of poet, biographer, and critic Tom Clark has got me thinking about Jim Dine all the same.


Trademark "Hearts" by Jim Dine


In mail-art, we tend to have a core of artists we refer to as common currency (even though individual tastes are infinite and we see all kinds of influences). In addition to Ray Johnson and Cavellini, we often talk about Yoko Ono, Kurt Schwitters, Warhol, and Pollock - add a half dozen others. Also include Fluxus


Perhaps Jim Dine deserves a whole lot more consideration than he has been given among mail-artists because the influence is present. Primarily, he is associated with popart. Yet strong ties and contributions to Neo-DadaFluxus and performance art are there als0. And, you know, his work is really good. Even more to the point, his connection to poetry - his longstanding commitment to intermedia that unites word and image - is outstanding and deserves some serious examination. It might provide some new thinking too. 


This meditation is inspired by reading some Jim Dine poetry on the Clark blog. Do not become disoriented. The Dine work is placed with some fine work by da Vinci; there is another link to more Jim Dine if you scroll down:


http://tomclarkblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/jim-dine-downfall-of-your-...





Views: 1053

Tags: Sloan, flux-us, vispo

Comment

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Comment by Marie Wintzer on December 11, 2011 at 12:28am

I guess I could try to do something with it, yes. I know he liked "No, I prefer MinXus".

Comment by De Villo Sloan on December 10, 2011 at 7:48pm

Marie, you need to send MinXus Lynxus to JF. I'm sure he'd like it.

Comment by De Villo Sloan on December 10, 2011 at 6:37am
Comment by Marie Wintzer on December 10, 2011 at 2:40am

Have you seen that Tiziana Baracchi has sent him a horse taxonomy? You should send him the MinXus chart!

Comment by De Villo Sloan on December 10, 2011 at 12:43am

sure as shootin tryin to start the rayjay aint dead thang

Comment by De Villo Sloan on December 10, 2011 at 12:40am

giggy anton's hawkin books now. (ray j @ bmc on the cover). send 'em yer pesos he's tellin em but dont speak a word of english he sez. better stick with me cb, 

http://grigori-nojohnrays.blogspot.com/

Comment by Marie Wintzer on December 10, 2011 at 12:04am

I didn't dare mentioning the MinXus stamps, but they are my favorites of course. Sane alternative, I'm not sure.

And those are great too:

Comment by De Villo Sloan on December 9, 2011 at 10:14pm

or belt

Comment by De Villo Sloan on December 9, 2011 at 10:13pm

You might wish instead to choose MinXus - a sane alternative. Does not matter. In the end, we come from the "the same alluvial plane"

MinXus stamp designs

Comment by Katerina Nikoltsou (MomKat) on December 9, 2011 at 9:52pm

Thanks, Sloan xxx

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