Posts Tagged ‘poetry’

Invisible City

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Invisible City Issues 1 - 6


Invisible City is an online magazine in the vein of Cuemix and Romka which we have featured previously. It’s an online magazine in .pdf format showcasing contemporary art and writing by emerging artists from Australia and around the world. Each issue explores a contemporary theoretical idea through images, poetry, creative and critical writing. It’s curated and run by Marlaina Read, an emerging artist from Sydney. You can read her honours paper here. It’s a good read if you are interested in the super-modernity of post-industrial non-places such as airports and how to travel and take photographs which convey a personal, reflective intimacy for distances travelled and places seen. She’s also got a blog, so you can check out her more personal and rarefied musings there.

Each issue covers a different topic, such as blindness, mapping or bodies (in issues 3, 5 and 4 respectively). It’s free to download and definitely worth a look so we’ve compiled the first six issues for you to download here.

Download – Invisible City Issues 1 to 6

Invisible City – Official Site

Marlaina Read – Official Site

Wee Have Also Sound-Houses

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Carrying on from our article on Delia Derbyshire and the BBC Radiophonic Workshop here is an ancient and prescient poem. “Wee have also Sound-Houses” became the Radiophonic Workshop’s motto. Taken from The New Atlantis by Francis Bacon, for many years was pinned to the Workshop’s office wall. It is an extraordinary piece of writing, seemingly a vision of some recording studio of the future; yet, incredibly, it was written in 1624.

Andy couldn't think of a relevant pun for this photograph

Andy couldn't think of a relevant pun for this photograph

Wee have also Sound-Houses, wher wee practise and demonstrate all Sounds, and their Generation. Wee have Harmonies which you have not, of Quarter-Sounds and lesser Slides of Sounds. Diverse Instruments of Musick likewise to you unknowne, some sweeter than any you have; Together with Bells and Rings that are dainty and sweet. Wee represent Small Sounds as Great and Deepe; Likewise Great Sounds, Extenuate and Sharpe; Wee make diverse Tremblings and Warblings of Sounds, which in their Originall are Entire. Wee represent and imitate all Articulate Sounds and Letters, and the Voices and Notes of Beasts and Birds. Wee have certaine Helps, which sett to the Eare doe further the Hearing greatly. Wee have also diverse Strange and Artificiall Eccho’s, Reflecting the Voice many times, and as it were Tossing it; And some that give back the Voice Lowder then it came, some Shriller, and some Deeper; Yea, some rendring the Voice, Differing in the Letters or Articulate Sound, from that they receyve. Wee have also meanes to convey Sounds in Trunks and Pipes, in strange Lines, and Distances. – Francis Bacon, 1624

Ladies and Gentlemen, Mr. Leonard Cohen

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

The folks at Pitchfork have offered up this 45-minute film, offering a candid glimpse of Cohen’s pre-singer-songwriter days. Directed by Donald Brittain and Don Owen, produced in 1965, this 45-minute promo for the then youthful looking Leonard Cohen functions now as a faded cinematic snapshot of the man who, in the forty years since the promo was made, has evolved into arguably the world’s greatest living poet. You can buy this on VHS or DVD if you want to own it. The DVD has a few supplemental short films and a couple of marvelous video montages coupled with Cohen’s poetry.

Click to watch

Click to watch

Pitchfork

Buy on Amazon

IMDB