| Today's poet almost certainly can't help but think about 
                    how their poem looks on a page. It's easy to change line breaks, 
                    stanza breaks, word spacing, line length and fonts with a 
                    word processing program. And it's interesting to see how changing 
                    the line length or a stanza break can slightly alter the meaning 
                    of the text. But what happens when we take the words out of 
                    the poem and the letters out of the words and play with their 
                    relation to the page? What happens when the visual form of 
                    the poem is as important as the words that make it?  Although the Chinese were actually the first to invent movable 
                    type, Johannes Gutenberg is widely credited for inventing 
                    the printing press around 1454, when his Guttenberg Bible 
                    became the first mass-produced book. In no time, typesetting 
                    technology spread rapidly across Europe. Within only fifty 
                    years, thousands of printers set up shops in over two hundred 
                    European cities. The invention of the printing press was quite 
                    the revolution. Not only did moveable type allow for the mass 
                    production of books (before its invention scribes had to write 
                    out entire books by hand--you try copying an entire book word-for-word!) 
                    and provide a healthy income for early entrepreneurs, but 
                    it opened an expansive field in which artisans, visionaries, 
                    and craftsmen could experiment with the visual aspect of poetics. 
                    Indeed, since the early beginnings of the press, artists 
                    began creating what would later be called "concrete poetry." 
                   In the early 20th century, experiments in visual poetry occurred 
                    in Russian Futurist typographic work, the Italian Futurists, 
                    and in the "calligrammatic" works of Guillaume Apollinaire. 
                    (The word calligram comes from the Greek "calli" 
                    and "gramma" which together mean "beautiful 
                    writing.")  
                    
                      |  |  But it wasn't until the early fifties that the term "concrete 
                    poetry" was coined. Amazingly, the term came about simultaneously 
                    in three countries. In Switzerland, Eugene Gomringer, published 
                    a book of poetry in which each poem only consisted of one 
                    word. He spatially arranged each word so that the placement 
                    of the word represented the poem's meaning and called his 
                    word placements "constellations." Swedish artist 
                    Öyvind Fahlström wrote a Manifesto for Concrete 
                    Poetry in 1953. In it, he described a poetry in which the 
                    words were used in the way a painter would use representational 
                    forms. And at the same time in Brazil, Haroldo de Campos, 
                    Augusto de Campos and Décio Pignatari formed the Noigandres 
                    group, named for Ezra Pound's Canto XX. The group produced 
                    a literary magazine which served as an experimental ground 
                    for their three-dimensional poetry which they called Poesia 
                    Concreta.  By 1956 the First National Show of Concrete Art included 
                    posters of non-linear poems. In 1959, the first international 
                    show of concrete poetry was held in Stuttgart, Germany and 
                    by the early 1960's, exhibitions of concrete poetry were widespread 
                    in Europe, Japan and the United States. And although the term 
                    "concrete poetry" is now a blanket term for the 
                    many forms of visual poetry, it lived on through artists such 
                    as Steve 
                    McCaffery, Emmett 
                    Williams , and bpNichol. 
                   This issue of Poems that Go features work which continues 
                    in the tradition of typographical experimentation--this time 
                    on the Web. Our featured artist, Michael Madsen, presents 
                    "Letters 
                    Demand Things," in which Madsen seeks to explore 
                    the relationships between letters themselves-- both in what 
                    they represent and their physical structure. He masterfully 
                    breaks the letters down into sounds and shapes, all the time 
                    allowing the audience a first-hand glimpse into his textual 
                    experiment.  "Jabber: 
                    The Jabberwocky Engine" by Neil Hennessey builds 
                    up these letters to produce nonsensical words that sound like 
                    English words, in the same way that the words from Lewis Carroll's 
                    Jabberwocky sound like English words. Hennessey realizes a 
                    linguistic chemistry with letters as atoms and words as molecules. 
                    And finally, YOUNG-HAE CHANG HEAVY INDUSTRIES presents "Betty 
                    Nkomo" in their signature style: devoid of color, 
                    interactivity and graphics, leaving the audience with one 
                    rhythmically charged word on the screen at a time--making 
                    what else? Poetry.  For more information visit:
 Concrete Poetry: A World View, Mary Ellen Solt http://www.ubu.com/papers/solt/index.html
 Figuring The Word, Essays on Books, Writing, and Visual Poetics, 
                    Johanna Drucker. Granary Books. 1998.
 
 Pilot 
                    Plan for Concrete Poetry Augusto de Campos, Decio Pignatari, Haroldo de Campos: Brazil. 
                    1958.
 Specific Concrete-Visual Poems on the WWW-InterNet. Selected 
                    and Indexed by Michael P. Garofalo. http://www.gardendigest.com/concrete/cvpindex.htm
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