黑料不打烊


ONLINE: Material Poetry

Oct 03, 2024 - Nov 28, 2024

The exhibition delves into themes of intimacy, identity, and the self offering critical reflections on these topics through various media. Since the 1990s, poetry鈥檚 evolution has been profoundly shaped by technological advancements, moving away from the printed page and becoming a more dynamic, interactive, and inclusive art form. The incorporation of multimedia, hypertext, video, the web, emerging technologies like blockchain, and the role of performance have all contributed to poetry鈥檚 transformation in the digital age.

芦Material Poetry禄 bridges analog and digital realms, embedding poetry into various artistic media and bringing it out of the ordinary. The exhibition disrupts the linearity of text, creating a unique space where the poetic emerges in the digital domain. In these artworks, the artists translate life into visual language, merging text with the viewer鈥檚 mind to recreate the lived rhythms and social textures of particular times and spaces, allowing someone else鈥檚 voice, words, and body to be experienced intimately. Each work in the exhibition reveals a different facet of this transformation.

Ana Mar铆a Caballero鈥檚 Paperwork reflects the materiality of poetry and its role in transmitting memory. Through performances in cities such as Los Angeles, Bogot谩, and Valencia, Caballero gathered audience reactions to her poetry, which she then used to generate digital paper sculptures. These sculptures invoke the architectural elements of each city, blending the personal with the public, and presenting poetry as both message and medium in a new, digital form.

In Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley鈥檚 芦The Ocean Remembered Your Body禄, players navigate a text-based video game that explores identity and memory. The ocean serves as both a metaphor and a physical space, drawing on the artist鈥檚 personal history and honoring the narratives of marginalized bodies. Inspired by early text-based adventure games, the piece encourages players to engage deeply with their imaginations, reconstructing the world from their own experiences and histories.

Eduardo Kac鈥檚 Letter, originally created as a VR experience, presents a poem in the form of two spiraling cones made of text. The work draws the viewer into an immersive reading experience, where the text can be rotated and navigated in three-dimensional space. Referencing moments of birth and death in the poet鈥檚 family, the poem鈥檚 emotional weight is amplified by its dynamic form. Letter is a powerful exploration of the spatial possibilities of language and is presented here in its video version, evocative of its vintage interactive form.

In Franziska Ostermann鈥檚 芦Can you hear me?", the artist stages a virtual Zoom call between different versions of herself. The fragmented conversations, filled with questions like 芦Can you hear me?禄, highlight the challenges of authentic connection in the digital space. The piece underscores the alienation and separation caused by the very technology that enables the meeting, as the selves attempt to connect but never quite align.

Finally, Sasha Stiles鈥 芦Cursive Binary: Portrait of the Poet (Variation 1)禄 is a layered, generative work that merges poetry with AI and digital language. Stiles collaborates with her AI alter ego to reinterpret her poem Portrait of the Poet as a Brief History of Humanity, transforming it into Cursive Binary - a language she developed for transhuman communication. The piece explores the intersection of human and machine, questioning the future of authorship and identity in a posthuman world.

Material Poetry is more than a collection of artworks 鈥 it is an intimate dialogue between language and form, with poetry becoming a living, breathing artifact: multifaceted and dynamic. These works challenge binary thinking and embrace hybridity, expanding our capacity to experience, comprehend, and engage with language on a deeply visceral level. They invite us into the ever-evolving story of what it means to be human.



The exhibition delves into themes of intimacy, identity, and the self offering critical reflections on these topics through various media. Since the 1990s, poetry鈥檚 evolution has been profoundly shaped by technological advancements, moving away from the printed page and becoming a more dynamic, interactive, and inclusive art form. The incorporation of multimedia, hypertext, video, the web, emerging technologies like blockchain, and the role of performance have all contributed to poetry鈥檚 transformation in the digital age.

芦Material Poetry禄 bridges analog and digital realms, embedding poetry into various artistic media and bringing it out of the ordinary. The exhibition disrupts the linearity of text, creating a unique space where the poetic emerges in the digital domain. In these artworks, the artists translate life into visual language, merging text with the viewer鈥檚 mind to recreate the lived rhythms and social textures of particular times and spaces, allowing someone else鈥檚 voice, words, and body to be experienced intimately. Each work in the exhibition reveals a different facet of this transformation.

Ana Mar铆a Caballero鈥檚 Paperwork reflects the materiality of poetry and its role in transmitting memory. Through performances in cities such as Los Angeles, Bogot谩, and Valencia, Caballero gathered audience reactions to her poetry, which she then used to generate digital paper sculptures. These sculptures invoke the architectural elements of each city, blending the personal with the public, and presenting poetry as both message and medium in a new, digital form.

In Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley鈥檚 芦The Ocean Remembered Your Body禄, players navigate a text-based video game that explores identity and memory. The ocean serves as both a metaphor and a physical space, drawing on the artist鈥檚 personal history and honoring the narratives of marginalized bodies. Inspired by early text-based adventure games, the piece encourages players to engage deeply with their imaginations, reconstructing the world from their own experiences and histories.

Eduardo Kac鈥檚 Letter, originally created as a VR experience, presents a poem in the form of two spiraling cones made of text. The work draws the viewer into an immersive reading experience, where the text can be rotated and navigated in three-dimensional space. Referencing moments of birth and death in the poet鈥檚 family, the poem鈥檚 emotional weight is amplified by its dynamic form. Letter is a powerful exploration of the spatial possibilities of language and is presented here in its video version, evocative of its vintage interactive form.

In Franziska Ostermann鈥檚 芦Can you hear me?", the artist stages a virtual Zoom call between different versions of herself. The fragmented conversations, filled with questions like 芦Can you hear me?禄, highlight the challenges of authentic connection in the digital space. The piece underscores the alienation and separation caused by the very technology that enables the meeting, as the selves attempt to connect but never quite align.

Finally, Sasha Stiles鈥 芦Cursive Binary: Portrait of the Poet (Variation 1)禄 is a layered, generative work that merges poetry with AI and digital language. Stiles collaborates with her AI alter ego to reinterpret her poem Portrait of the Poet as a Brief History of Humanity, transforming it into Cursive Binary - a language she developed for transhuman communication. The piece explores the intersection of human and machine, questioning the future of authorship and identity in a posthuman world.

Material Poetry is more than a collection of artworks 鈥 it is an intimate dialogue between language and form, with poetry becoming a living, breathing artifact: multifaceted and dynamic. These works challenge binary thinking and embrace hybridity, expanding our capacity to experience, comprehend, and engage with language on a deeply visceral level. They invite us into the ever-evolving story of what it means to be human.



Contact details

Freilager-Platz 9 Basel, Switzerland 4142

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