Exploding Tongues: Language, Art, and the Russian Avant-gardeMain MenuBack to Futurism: Russian Artist BooksIntroductory Page by Chris GilmanBookENDS: A Working Theory of Textuality as Cultural Dominant, 1912-An Introduction and Conclusion to a Semester's Investigation into the Book Arts as an Avant-garde PracticeBook Case StudiesCollaborative Research by Case StudiesBig Bang: Timeline of Russian Avant-Garde Book Arts and Their Cultural ImpactsA Timeline of Russian Avant-Garde Book Arts and Their Cultural ImpactsCoaRse CaLIBrationARTS 227 "Introduction to Letterpress Printing" (Pedersen) and CSLC134/RUSN334 "Exploding Tongues" (Gilman)NthOlogyA limited edition collaborative book arts project by students of ARTS 227 (Pedersen) and CSLC 134/RUSN 334 (Gilman), Spring, '17MANIFESTERS (AB & Kelly): A portfolio of process and productsAppendix: A Path Through Russian Avant-Garde BooksChristopher Gilman1985b99a2acd541caa12a10c3ebf6896565283abDexter Blackwell92e005ca94195f836c6089cf147faff4c74fa79eZoe Foster-La Duc1c8954189fb3ee4ab6e36bfb90fae86777eab97Stephen Heim7069d17c035042745c96bc6c7619096cd7b33da4Kelly Kirklande1805e502570d093d70f00df18f145c99290d0a3Ian Lehineb028c384a69e4b92166e7791b002fa3f2cee5818Timothy Lewis13880d3d99b4b71ce85be63e69a6d44e38853d68Jmedina29ac3fc10003fb639ac412984b59b01a5b826e161Taylor Robinsonaa08dd3939f1f1c6162c5518ae531385e51659afEvan Sarafian042e10782d9a6d3f0001a4b35abb02f58ad84684Craig Dietrich2d66800a3e5a1eaee3a9ca2f91f391c8a6893490ILiADS (Institute for Liberal Arts Digital Scholarship)
Learn Artists! - Nude Woman
12017-05-12T01:53:39-07:00Timothy Lewis13880d3d99b4b71ce85be63e69a6d44e38853d68120411Alexei Kruchenykh and Kirill Zdanevich - 1917plain2017-05-12T01:53:39-07:00Timothy Lewis13880d3d99b4b71ce85be63e69a6d44e38853d68
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12017-04-30T20:36:19-07:00Mirskontsa as Event17Tim Lewis - Final Course Scalar Projectplain2017-05-12T15:22:23-07:00The occasion for an Event, as philosopher Alain Badiou renders, is generally silent, hyper-localized, and only recognized as such retrospectively; indeed, the insertion of a new problematic (a Third Term) into the dialectics of everyday life can be so cacophonous that it can function at the level of white noise in its immediate present. While by no means the first handmade book in the Russian Avant Garde, Mirskonsta functions as an emblematic text for the genre-- both because of its literary composition/focus and its physical composition. Crafted in concert by poets Velimir Khlebnikov and Alexi Kruchenykh with the painter Natailia Goncharova, Mirskontsa demonstrated the uncanny representation across a text of bodies, poetry, and natural entities. Indeed, this moment in time was characterized as an Explodity!-- an occasion for the enter evacuation of all previous knowledges in the wake of a monstrous influx of alternative formations.
Small, unevenly cut, and on the cusp of imagining new articulations of representation, Mirskontsa offers a special blend of content. From its nondescript but jarring figures, to its classical odes, Mirskontsa positions readers within a new relation to the text through the instantiation of multiple layers of conscious poetics. That is to say, by simultaneously (and immediately) locating alternative poetic formations, classical and personalized characters, and Rayonistic scenes, Mirskontsa bursts apart with literary life.
Mirskontsa offers an analytic inasmuch as it offers a book. Where Mirskontsa directs, we must follow. Consistent with variations of Pyotr Ouspensky's theory of the fourth dimension and Roman Jakobson's re-vitalization of Sausserian linguistic practices, Mirskontsa begs the question of meaning-making across and upon a text, not simply in its narrative. In this way, it is possible to consider the hand-made quality of the text as an important signifier for the completion of the sound-shape image of the a book written 'backwards.'
Whereas Ouspensky focused on the more simplistic four-dimensional model, Jakobson would argue that language functions from a six-dimensional world-being: Referentials, Poetics, Affect, Conates, Phatics, and Metalinguistics. An instructive moment, the unconscious deployment of these handmade texts served as the pedagogical materials for a new engagement with knowledge, perception, and being.
While not directly involved in the production of Mirskonsta, Kazimir Malevich demonstrated this Futurist aesthetic across this modality in his costumes for the opera Victory Over the Sun. This Futurist opera contributes to the theory of a four-dimensional literary-linguistic experience in that, from its theme of the re-valuation of values to its jarringly morphed costumes, a consideration of the simultaneity of play and history could be evaluated. In plain terms, this opera's production and material components offer a directing question: The Future (the aforementioned 'Victory') is happening in Russia at the same moment the play is being produced and performed, with actors (in real life and on stage) repeating their performances across the audience of time.