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  1. Tao

    Tao

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 21.04.2011 - 12:25

  2. open.ended

    Author description: open.ended is an interactive three-dimensional poem experienced through the interplay of shifting geometric surfaces. Verses appear on the faces of separate translucent cubes nested within one another. The reader manipulates a mouse, joystick, or touch-screen to bring stanzas on different surfaces into view. As cubes, faces, and layers are revealed, dynamically updating lines of text move in and out of focus. The structure of the poem facilitates a multiplicity of readings: from single verses on cube faces, to sequential verses across faces, to juxtapositions of verses across multiple cubes. Meaning is constructed actively through collaboration between reader, author, and mediated work. An audio track of the authors' layered voices extends the experience, enveloping the reader in the atmosphere of the poem, organically complementing the visual and tactile components of the work.

    (Source: Author description, ELC vol. 1).

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 29.04.2011 - 10:01

  3. Girls' Day Out

    This is a work in Flash format. It contains three separate but related sections: the title prose poem, "Girls' Day Out"; the author's note on the poem; and "Shards," a poem composed from phrases found in articles in the Houston Chronicle that covered the events that inspired the poem.
    (Source: Author description, ELC 1).

    from the ELD http://directory.eliterature.org/node/3943
    After opening the piece, there are three different links you can click on to read all parts of Kerry's work. The top link, located on the right side of the page is labeled as "poem." The next link is in the middle of the page on the left side and is labeled "author's note." The final link is centered on the bottom of the page and is labeled as "Shards."

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 10.05.2011 - 13:09

  4. Oulipoems

    Oulipoems is a series of six interactive poetry Flash works, ranging from electronic poems, to games, to a tool for generating and writing poetry using the vocabulary of a variety of poets. The pieces are loosely based on the Oulipo movement in French literature, which focused on texts based on constraints (for instance, Perec's famous novel A Void, a lipogram in which the letter e does not appear) and also on mixtures of literature and mathematics.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 08.11.2011 - 16:25

  5. Lombrices (Minhocas)

    Author statement: "Estuve haciendo un video con Ricardo Pons. Compré frente al Club de los pescadores en la Costanera Norte un paquete de lombrices grandes, gordas. Las lavé en un balde para sacarles la tierra y las puse en el medio de una tabla blanca de 100 x 70 centímetros. Ricardo las filmaba mientras las lombrices se corrían hacia los costados cubriendo todo el rectángulo. Resultó un cuadro movedizo. Pensé terminar el video con una gallina hambrienta comiendo vorazmente el dibujo. No sé si lo voy a hacer. Pero me gusta la idea del arte que dibujan las lombrices, que luego es comido por la gallina y que después, se puede terminar, es defecado sobre un infierno de Boticelli. Es decir cubrir todo el ciclo: arte animal, arte comido y arte defecado sobre la idea principal de nuestro patrimonio cultural: arte suplicio, arte infernal, arte castigo. No se cómo llamar a esos cuadros horribles tan bien pintados." (Ferrari, Official Site)

    Luciana Gattass - 23.11.2012 - 15:22

  6. 4 uomini

    Generative poem.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 30.06.2013 - 13:01

  7. The Idea of Order at Key West Reordered

    Plays random sections of a recording of Wallace Stevens reading The Idea of Order at Key West. Click the waveform to play the poem at the corresponding point in time. Blue and green are special colors in the poetry of Stevens. Green for the earth, for nature, for the quotidian, the worldly. Blue for the sky, imagination, the ethereal, thought and dream.

    Jim Andrews - 26.02.2015 - 02:25

  8. ___Hallelujah

    Hallelujah (to use the short form of the title) is a work of “monitor poetry” by ni_ka. Every page of her blog has bursts of flowers, hearts, and other graphics dense enough to obscure the screen; this version presents only the text “underneath.”

    Magnus Knustad - 08.11.2016 - 17:23

  9. The Egg The Cart The Horse The Chicken

    The egg, the cart, the horse, the chicken was written by Hazel Smith (text) and Roger Dean (sound). The hypertext and animations, written in Flash by Hazel Smith, are designed for a split screen. The texts in both the upper and lower frame are grouped into short linear 'scenes' which form an overall 'movie'. But the sequence in the upper frame can be disrupted by clicking on hyperlinks (marked in capital letters), which allow the reader to jump to texts other than the ones which follow each other in sequence. Consequently the juxtaposition of the texts on the two different screens is also variable. The piece engages with the way in which linear systems are constantly disrupted by non-linearity. This is written into the piece at a formal level by the use of the hyperlinks, animation and split screen, which tend to disrupt normal reading processes. Thematically the piece also addresses the ways in which a simple cause and effect relationship rarely operates, even within scientific systems.

    Hazel Smith - 26.03.2021 - 11:22