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Intertitles - An anthology at the intersection of writing & visual art (Paperback)
Jess Chandler, Aimee Selby, Hana Noorali & Lynton Talbot; Foreword by Isabel Waidner; Contributions by Fatema Abdoolcarim, Victoria Adukwei Bulley, Bebe Ashley, Anna Barham, Paul Becker, Adam Christensen, Sophie Collins, CAConrad, Rory Cook, Jesse Darling, Anais Duplan, Inua Ellams, Olamiju Fajemisin, Caspar Heinemann, Johanna Hedva, Sophie Jung, Sharon Kivland, Tarek Lakhrissi, Ghislaine Leung, Quinn Latimer, Jordan Lord, Dasha Loyko, Charlotte Prodger, Laure Prouvost; Afterword by Vahni Capildeo; Designed by Traven T. Croves; Contributions by …
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R383
Discovery Miles 3 830
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Siren (Some Poetics) (Paperback)
Quinn Latimer, Sarah Demeuse; Text written by Don Mee Choi, Ruth EstĂ©vez, Bernadette Mayer, …
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R793
R665
Discovery Miles 6 650
Save R128 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Since 1953, the Kulturkreis der deutschen Wirtschaft has awarded
the ars viva prize to outstanding young artists based in Germany.
The award honours work that demonstrates a distinct language of
form and an awareness of contemporary issues. This year's award
includes exhibitions at Brucke-Museum, Berlin and the Kai Art
Center, Tallinn, Estonia. The ars viva prize 2022 will be awarded
to Tamina Amadyar (*1989), Lewis Hammond (*1987) and Mooni Perry
(*1990). Text in English and German.
Readers of new poetry have come to expect a certain amount of
wonder in the work, a certain receptivity (here and there) to the
non-rational, preternatural undercurrents which ordinarily reveal
themselves to us with full force only every now and then. For some,
poetry might even serve, in part, as a conservancy for that
receptivity, a protected place for it to run free beyond the reach
of all the paperwork and chatter. Rumored Animals is one such
place. By turns ecstatic and grief-stricken, Quinn Latimer's
poems-distinctive, audacious, elemental, and unyielding-render the
world with all its strangenesses intact and vitality restored,
asserting the legitimacy of another, more primal vision at odds
with the agreed-upon, one where "mountains / surround us with their
animal / prowl, throw back // their black capes / and are done."
This is a thrilling, defiant, and heartening body of work.
--TIMOTHY DONNELLY QUINN LATIMER was born in Venice, California,
and educated at Sarah Lawrence College and Columbia University's
School of the Arts in New York. Her poems have been featured in
Boston Review, The Last Magazine, The Paris Review, and Prairie
Schooner, among other journals, and have been nominated for a
Pushcart Prize. Recordings or performances of her poems have also
been included in exhibitions at Art Basel Miami Beach; New Jerseyy,
Basel; Galerie J, Geneva; and Kunsthaus Glarus. Latimer lives in
Basel, Switzerland, where she is a regular contributor to Artforum,
Frieze, and numerous artist monographs and critical anthologies.
Rumored Animals, which was awarded the 2010 American Poetry Journal
Book Prize, is her first book. In her debut, Latimer draws on
sources from contemporary photography and art Diane Arbus,
Francesca Woodman, Donald Judd to develop a complex engagement with
constructions of self and prevailing cultural determinations of the
female and feminine. In rich, robust sounds and rhythms, the poet
strives to recognize herself within surface and image ( silver
mirrors of ice, a water pale body miming my own ), attempts to
identify with the object of an outside gaze, figured as the looming
presence of a brutally defining camera, and a discomfort at the
fraught relation between herself as body and represented sign. More
often than not, illusory, elusive reflective surfaces prove
dangerously isolating ( Blue mirrors/ of lakes linger like glittery
apprentices.... In their reflection, I stumble... ) while the poet
s consciousness of being seen and fixed by another is spiked with
mistrust: all borders are defined by/ a body and the water lapping
against it./ Whose hands hold this picture?/ Whose eyes?
Negotiating contradictory urges to conceal and reveal identity,
Latimer allows a quiet refusal to come fully into view. This is an
impressive debut. (Mar.) --Publishers Weekly
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