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  1. Stéphane Mallarmé's The Conversation

    Stéphane Mallarmé's “Demon of Analogy” is a prose poem about demonic nature of mishearing. Francis Ford Coppola's “The Conversation” is about the demonic technologies that allow us to hear all-too-well. Joe Milutis' “Stéphane Mallarmé's 'The Conversation,'” with little to no editing mashes up these classic texts, to suggest that one may be a mishearing (or spooky translation) of the other. In addition, the original text of the Mallarmé poem is translated by way of a number of bending techniques that, while getting back to the original sound and meaning of the French, bend, distort and remix the original. This project is part of a larger scholarly and creative exploration of experimental translation as an extension of remix and appropriation practices. A number of chapbooks, videos, lectures and performances have emerged from this project, including Monkey pOm!

    Marius Ulvund - 05.02.2015 - 15:38

  2. And Speak of Long Ago Times

    A 21st century art historian confronts the known and the unknown in both his life and his work, as - in a polyphonic 19th century remix - And Speak of Long Ago Times replays the words of 19th century Florentine sculptor Giovanni Duprè; replays Giuseppe Verdi's words from his autobiography that concern his antislavery opera Nabucco; replays the Narrative of the Adventures and Escape of Moses Roper from American Slavery which was published in London in 1837 and went through at least 11 editions. It is 1842. The Irish American sculptor Hiram Powers is in his studio in Florence, creating a model for The Greek Slave. It is the year that Nabucco premiered at La Scala in Milan. The Irish woman poet Frances Browne has just published "Songs of Our Land" in the Irish Penny Journal.

    Marius Ulvund - 05.02.2015 - 15:51

  3. Pigeon Forge

    "Pigeon Forge" is a poetry generator which remixes Nick Montfort's "Taroko Gorge" -- a nature poem generator built in javascript. Whalen modified the code and substituted the language of Montfort's work to create this poetry generator, which forms a picture of an urban landscape, it's green areas and city life.

    Guro Prestegard - 20.09.2016 - 15:55

  4. Take Gonzo

    Take Gonzo started as a Taroko Gorge remix, and is now the gateway in to an creative exploration through the electronic literature filed.

    Take Gonzo includes a morse code which translates into an English sentence.

    Anders Gaard - 04.10.2016 - 22:43

  5. Gorgeous Twist

    Georgeous Twist is based upon Nick Montforts machine based poetry Taroko Gorge.

    It show womens different roles in life and the different choices life make for us.
    This is an everlasting installation that constantly changes it's outcome.

    Susanne Dahl - 06.10.2016 - 14:55

  6. Oko na Donbas

    Oko na Donbas

    Guro Prestegard - 18.10.2016 - 15:58

  7. Affiliations - Remix and Intervene: Computing Sound and Visual Poetry

    In  this  exhibit,  sound  is  represented  as  an  overarching  medium  connecting  the  artworks displayed. Visitors of the “Affiliations” exhibit will find poetic works that radically explore language and sound. For the curators, sound is one of the fundamental aspects, if not the core, of experimental and digital poetics. Yet, as some writers  and  critics  have  pointed  out  - especially  Chris  Funkhouser,  Hazel  Smith,  and John Barber - sound has not been sufficiently highlighted as a fundamental trait of electronic literature.

    The “Affiliations” exhibit presents works that embrace appropriation and remix of older and contemporary pieces - be they merely formalist or politically engaged - as pervasive creative methods in experimental poetics. Furthermore, it suggests that  electronic  literature  can  be  seen  as  a  heterogeneous  field  of  self-reflexive experimentation with the medium, language, sound, code, and space.

    Hannah Ackermans - 09.08.2017 - 10:58

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