Alain Arias-Misson is a visual poet, writer, critic, and artist whose multimedia works include typewriter poetry, concrete and visual poetry, stories and novels. He is particularly known for three dimensional poem objects and for happenings that he calls Public Poems with performers carrying alphabetical letters as tall as they are through city streets.

Life

Born December 11, 1936 in Brussels,[1][2] Belgium, his father Belgian and his mother American, he was deeply influenced by the experience of emigrating to the United States. When he was four, the family fled the Nazis approaching Belgium and came to New York City where he grew up. The dual influence of America and Europe continued to shape his life.[3]

He attended Harvard University and graduated magna cum laude in Classical Greek Literature,[1] Philosophy and Contemporary French Literature in 1959. During his college years, he developed an interest in experimental poetry.

After graduating, he left for North Africa, where he volunteered as a teacher in Ben Aknoun, Algiers, after the Algerian Revolution.[1] In 1963 he married Nela Arias, a Cuban-Asturian painter studying with Hans Hofmann. The couple adopted the hyphenated name and remained in New York City until 1965, while Arias-Misson published literary criticism and stories in American literary journals including Chicago Review, Paris Review, American Book Review, Fiction International, Partisan Review and O.ARS.[3]

After the outbreak of the Vietnam War the couple moved to Barcelona to avoid Arias-Misson being drafted. In Spain, he built up an international and intergenerational network of poets and artists, with for instance, Joan Brossa,[4][5] Herminio Molero, and Ignacio Gómez de Liaño.[3] He also collaborated briefly with the experimental music and performance art group Zaj and their members Walter Marchetti, Juan Hidalgo and Esther Ferrer. His poetic network grew to include poets from other European countries. His friends included Dom Sylvester Houédard, the British experimental poet, and Carlfriedrich Claus, German avante-garde artist.[3][6][7] [nb 1] [nb 2]

Through the Zaj-Group and the New York-based gallerist Emily Harvey,[10] who organized several exhibitions with Arias-Misson, he was introduced to many Fluxus artists, including Dick Higgins,[3][11] as well as Fluxus collectors like Francesco Conz,[12] Luigi Bonotto[13] and Hans Sohm,[14] who all shared an interest in experimental poetry, and in concrete and visual poetry, and collected his work.

Together with Jean-François Bory, Julien Blaine, Paul de Vree,[nb 3] Eugenico Miccini and Lucia Marcucci, he was a member of the poets’ group Lotte Poetica, initiated by the Italian poet Sarenco,[1] and regularly contributed to the journal that bore the group’s name and which he coedited.[nb 4] But his work was also represented in a variety of other important magazines of experimental literature such as De Tafelronde (by Paul de Vree, also coedited by Arias-Misson)[nb 5] and Phantomas in Belgium, Revue Où (by Henri Chopin),[25] Luna Park,[26] Doc(k)s, Ne coupez pas,[27] Approches[28] and L’Humidité[29] in France, Logomotives in Italy, ASA[nb 6] and Geijutsu Seikatsu in Japan, Ovum in Uruguay,[34] El Urogallo in Spain,[35] and Tlaloc in the UK.[nb 7] In 1967, he helped put together the first anthology in the U.S. dedicated to concrete poetry, published by Eugene Wildman as Anthology of Concretism in Chicago Review.[38]

In terms of literary theory and philosophy, Arias-Misson was inspired by the writings of Ludwig Wittgenstein to whom he explicitly pays homage in some of his works, and also by Ferdinand de Saussure, Henri Lefebvre, Roland Barthes, Noam Chomsky[nb 8] and Ernst Bloch.[nb 9]

The expansion of a traditional understanding of poetry and literature that Arias-Misson has practiced since the 1960s can be understood against the backdrop of literary experiments throughout the 20th century and, in particular, in the context of concepts of intermedia arts – a term coined by Dick Higgins in the mid-1960s. Arias-Misson then began experimenting with the spatiality of letters and words, creating three dimensional plexiglass boxes in which texts were arranged on transparent plastic forms. Leaving behind the flatness of the paper surface, the printed poem thus becomes a sculptural object. The use of effects of transparency, of overlayerings and distortions of letters and words is characteristic of these works.

In 1967 Arias-Misson conceived of the first of his Public Poems in Brussels, entitled The Vietnam Public Poem as a poetic protest against the war in Vietnam. Performers carried the human size white, blood-spattered, capital letters V, I, E, T, N, A, M through the streets. With this mixture between artistic happening and political demonstration he created a poetic form that allowed him to write texts in the social context of a city.[40] 28 Public Poems have taken place until today in cities like Madrid, Paris, Berlin, Venice, Los Angeles and New York amongst others.[nb 10]

Arias-Misson frequently moved and lived in different countries. In 1970 the Arias-Missons moved from Spain to Antwerp for a few months, then to Brussels. In 1973 they returned to New York. After they separated in 1983 he returned to Brussels to work for the European Community which would become the European Union in 1992. From 1991 to 2021 he lived with his second partner, Karen Moller, textile fashion designer and author, in Paris, Venice and Antwerp. As of 2023 he has been living in Madrid since 2021.

Works

Compositions

The works in the Compositions series (approx. 1968–1979) consist of 5 to 7 transparent Plexiglas panes arranged one behind the other , which are decorated with letters, words or sentences from Letraset. While a sheet of paper only offers a two-dimensional surface to stage syntactic and semantic relationships between linguistic elements, the layering of transparent Plexiglas levels enables the use of spatial depth as an artistic element of poetic text conception. There are two different models of compositions : In one, the transparent Plexiglas surfaces are attached one behind the other in a wooden frame so that they can be hung on the wall. In the other model, the transparent Plexiglas surfaces are attached one behind the other in a wooden base, so that they become free-standing objects. This unconventional sculptural (text) form became known through John Cage's multiples Not wanting to say anything about Marcel (1969). It has been used previously by other artists, including by the British visual poet Tom Edmonds in 1966,[43] Arias-Misson's first work of this type dates from 1968.

Object Poems

Along with the Public Poems and the Compositions , the Object Poems (approx. 1966–1982) are among Arias-Misson's best-known works. They were shown in some of the first exhibitions dedicated to experimental poetry and are documented in their catalogs and in various avant-garde literary magazines of the late 1960s and 1970s. The Object Poems consist of Plexiglas boxes with integrated transparent plastic elements on which words or sentences made from Letraset letters are distributed. The poem in the sense of a printed text becomes a sculptural object that must be viewed from different perspectives - whereby the viewing angles change the visual appearance of the text elements and they look very different from different directions. By making reflections, superimpositions and distortions of letters integral aesthetic qualities of these works, Arias-Misson expands the traditional rhetorical stylistic devices of poetic work. Accordingly, the texts cannot be written and printed on paper, but must be designed in three dimensions.

Photo Poems

The Photo Poems consist of sequential sequences of photographs of varying length. Arias-Misson posed in front of the camera and in many cases supplemented the photographic prints with handwritten texts. In 2021, the Galeria Estampa in Madrid dedicated an extensive exhibition to this cycle of works and published the portfolio El autor.... casi / The author... almost (30 copies), which includes reproductions of the Photo Poems Merde (1973), Raincoat day ( 1973), Punctuation (1973/74), Uncovering... it (1973/74), I'm in, inner, into! (1973/1974), Then... (1973/1974) and Fire (1974).[44]

Public Poems

In 1967, Arias-Misson realized the first of his public poems , entitled The Vietnam Public Poem , in Brussels, where he was living at the time . To protest the war in Vietnam, he had several friends carry the human-sized white letters V, I, E, T, N, A, M splattered with red paint through the streets of the city. The Public Poem G D followed in 1968 , which was also performed in Brussels. The Public Poem A Madrid , performed in Madrid in 1969 , proved to be influential in the development of this series of works in that he had the performers form new words from the letters of the title as the action progressed. Following an anagrammatic poetic principle, various words from the pool of letters were put together at central locations in Madrid's urban space: In front of Parliament, the word ARMA (weapon) was formed and transformed into AMAR (love) when the Guardia Civil approached . In 1972, The Public Punctuation Poem was realized in Pamplona as part of the Encuentras de Pamplona festival , the first avant-garde art festival in Spain, which at the time was still under the rule of the fascist dictator Francisco Franco. Even though in later years Arias-Misson was occasionally invited by public institutions to realize public poems , he usually refrained from obtaining the necessary official permits to be able to hold such events in public spaces. In this sense, the actions bear characteristics of artistic guerrilla tactics . Arias-Misson sees the fact that the ephemeral text inscribed in the city can provoke unpredictable reactions and set incalculable processes in motion as a poetic challenge. Over the years, numerous poetological texts have been written on the theory of the public poem as a literary form.[45]  The first public poems were documented with photos, which Arias-Misson often provided with handwritten comments. He later also resorted to film and video for the documentation.

List of Public Poems 1967–2022

  • The Vietnam Public Poem. Brussels, 1967
  • The GD Public Poem . Brussels, 1968
  • The A Madrid Public Poem . Madrid, 1969
  • The Knokke Baptismal Public Poem . Knokke, 1970
  • The Palabras Fragile Public Poem . Madrid, 1971
  • The Punctuation Public Poem . Pamplona, 1972, in the context of the Encuentras de Pamplona festival [46]
  • The Chomsky Generative Grammar Public Poem . Brussels, 1972
  • The Cat & Mouse Duo Public Poem . New York City, 1974
  • The Beethoven Bicentennial Public Poem. Bonn, Germany, 1975, at the invitation of the city of Bonn
  • The Proust Public Poem. Paris: Place Saint-Germain-des-Prés, 1975
  • The Fallen Angel . Verona, 1977
  • The Proust Public Poem . Paris, 1988[47]
  • The Teutonic Public Poem. Berlin, 1991, invited by the Literaturhaus Berlin ; and Bielefeld, at the invitation of the Kunsthalle Bielefeld
  • The Hollywood Monsters Public Poem. Los Angeles, 1991
  • The Public Shamanic Chapel Sistine Public Poem . Vatican, 1998[48]
  • The Surveillance Public Poem . Paris, 2003[49]
  • The Gan(t)d Public Panties Public Poem . Ghent, 2007, invited by Krikri Festival[50]
  • La Derniere S(c)ene Public Poem. Nice, 2008[51]
  • The Last Supper Public Poem . Marseilles, 2009[52]
  • The Public Linguistic Poem of Antwerp . Antwerp, 2013[53]
  • The Public Linguistic Poem II . Antwerp, 2014
  • The Public Sinking of Venice Poem . Venice, 2015[54]
  • The Burkini Public Poem . Deauville, 2017[55]
  • The Urbanographies Public Poem . Paris, 2019, at the invitation of the City of Paris and the Pompidou Center as part of Nuit Blanche [56]
  • The Illuminaciones Public Poem . Madrid, 2019, invited by the Reina Sofia Museum
  • The Transculturalisms Public Poem . New Haven, 2020, invited by the Beinecke Library at Yale University[57]
  • The Public Silence Poem . Paris: Place Clichy, 2020[58]
  • The Public BOEM Poem . Antwerp, 2021[59]
  • The Public Sognare Poem . Bozen and Rovereto, invited by Museion, Bozen/Bolzano and MART, Rovereto
  • The Public Illuminated Poem . In honor of the Asturian miners, Mieres, 2022, at the invitation of the city of Mieres

Theater Boxes

Between 1975 and the early 1990s, Arias-Misson worked on various series of works that he referred to as Theater Boxes . These include the Minimal Theaters (1976)[60]  , the Black Box Theaters (1981–1982), the Mental Theaters (1987–1988), and the Floating Mind Theaters (1987–1989). These often black boxes with a transparent front are reminiscent of dioramas or display cases in ethnographic museums, in which landscapes or urban scenes from the past are depicted with model figures against a painted background. In contrast, the 'Theater Boxes' do not represent realistic scenarios, but rather imaginary settings in which various materials are brought into an associative connection. They often contain images from the mass media such as photographs of television screens or clippings from magazines, as well as personal photographs, figures and handwritten elements.

Sculpture Poems

Around 2015, Arias-Misson began experimenting with the possibilities of 3D laser engraving - a process that is otherwise used primarily for advertising and other commercial purposes. Three-dimensional images can be engraved into transparent acrylic glass blocks. This technique enabled him to arrange free-floating letters inside the solid material without having to integrate transparent plastic forms as supports for texts in the interiors of boxes, as was the case with the Object Poems of the 1960s and 1970s. In the Sculpture Poems , too , the spatial staging of the texts is in a semantic tension with their content. Arias-Misson uses both figurative arrangements and mathematically complex shapes, such as Archimedean spirals or torus knots, which he develops using the virtual 3D design software Blender and Maya.

3D Video Poems

Inspired by the work with 3D virtual design software that Arias-Misson used for the Sculpture Poems , he developed a series of 3D video poems . Accompanied by soundtracks consisting of spoken words, sounds or musical elements, the three-dimensionally rendered text animations are projected as films onto upright panes of glass so that the poems appear to move through the air.[61][62][63]

Reception

Arias-Misson’s works are included in the earliest anthologies of experimental, visual and concrete poetry, like Emmett WilliamsAnthology of Concrete Poetry (1967)[64] and Jean-François Bory’s Bientôt (1967).[65][66] His work was shown in exhibitions in this field and is documented in their catalogues, such as Mostra de Poesia Concreta (Biennale di Venezia, Venice, Italy, 1969),[67] Klankteksten – Konkrete Poëzie – Visuele Teksten (Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 1970),[68] Buchstäblich wörtlich, wörtlich buchstäblich (Nationalgalerie Berlin, 1987),[69] Poésure et Peintrie (Musées de Marseille, France, 1998),[70] and La parola nell’arte (MART – Museo di Arte Contemporaneo di Rovereto e Trento, Rovereto, Italy, 2008).[71]

In 2018, Arias-Misson received the Prix international de littérature Bernard Heidsieck Mention spéciale Fondazione Bonotto awarded by Centre Pompidou.[72]

In 2020, Yale University's Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library acquired Arias-Misson's extensive archive. The institution's website states: “The Alain Arias-Misson Papers contain an extensive collection of correspondence; writings, visual poetry, and notes by Arias-Misson as well as works by Jean-François Bory and Ugo Carrega, among others; printed material including cards, pamphlets, ephemera, exhibition catalogs, serials, and books; and born-digital audiovisual materials. The extensive collection of correspondences, which spans generations and are international in scope, includes deep exchanges with Carlfriedrich Claus, Ignacio Gomez de Liano, Joan Brossa , Paul De Vree , in addition to briefs with François Dufrêne , Jacques Donguy , Dick Higgins , Mark Rothko , and Carolee Schneemann , among others. Complementing the correspondences are notes and writings pertaining to poems ranging from 1962 to 2017, such as Vietnam Superfiction (1967–1968), Cat and Mouse Public Poem (1974), and The Public Surveillance Poem (2003); writings and visual poetry published in Logomotives (1984), Poesia Vixual (1994), and Art in America (2004); sketches, photographs, and paste-ups for plexiglass projects.” [73]

Extensive holdings of works and documents can also be found in the Ruth and Marvin Sackner Archive of Concrete and Visual Poetry , which is part of the special collections of the libraries of the University of Iowa,[74] in the Archivio Nuova Scrittura (Bozen) and in the Fondazione Bonotto (Colceresa).

Publications

Novels and short stories

  • Vietnam Superfiction . Chicago Review and Delacorte Press, Chicago, IL 1967.
  • Confessions of a Murderer, Rapist, Fascist, Bomber, Thief; or, A year in the journal of an ordinary American: A Superfiction . Chicago Review Press, Chicago, IL 1974, ISBN 978-0-914090-05-2 .
  • The Mind Crime of August Saint . Northwestern University Press, Evanston, IL 1993.
  • Theater of Incest . Dalkey Archive Press, Champaign, IL 2007, ISBN 978-1-56478-481-0 ; French translation: Le Théâtre de l'Inceste . Ed. Serge Safran, Paris 2007, ISBN 979-10-90175-17-4 .
  • Tintin Meets the Dragon Queen in The Return of the Maya to Manhattan . Black Scat Books, San Francisco, CA 2013.
  • The Man Who Walked on Air. & other Tales of Innocence . Black Scat Books, San Francisco, CA 2013, ISBN 978-0-615-75437-6 .
  • Comic Books . Black Scat Books, San Francisco, CA 2015, ISBN 978-0-692-44067-4 .
  • The Autobiography of a Character from Fiction . Black Scat Books, San Francisco, CA 2016, ISBN 978-0-9977771-2-3 ; French translation: Autobiographie d'un personage de fiction . Ed. Serge Safran, Paris 2020, ISBN 979-10-97594-96-1 .
  • The Detective Who Didn't Have a Clue . Black Scat Books, San Francisco, CA 2017, ISBN 978-0-9977771-9-2 .

Theory and documentation

  • M. Dachy (Ed.): An exploration of the oil crisis . Studio Brescia, Brescia 1974.
  • Poesia Visiva. Studio Brescia, Brescia 1972.
  • Factotumbook No. 11: The Public Poem Book . Factotum Art Edition, Calaone-Baone 1978.
  • with Gillo Dorfles (ed.): Sei lirici della Poesia Visuale Internazionale . Archivio Nuova Scrittura, Milan 1990.
  • The visio-verbal sins of a literary saint . Rara International, Verona 1994.
  • From the cutting floor of the public poem . MER Paper Kunsthalle, Ghent 2013.
  • El autor...casi | The author...almost . Text by Ignacio Gomez de Liano, Estampa Ediciones, Madrid 2021.

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions (selection)

  • 2021: Compositions & Object Poems . Galeria Jose de La Mano, Madrid
  • 2021: The Author..almost . Galeria Estampa, Madrid
  • 2021: Transparencies . Coppejans Gallery, Antwerp
  • 2018: Oscar Niemeyer Museum, Asturias
  • 2015: Poesía de calle y poesía de transparencias . Galeria Freijo Madrid
  • 2015: Plastico-Concretist works from the 1970's . M HKA – Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst, Antwerp
  • 2013: The Public Poem Reactivated Project . Lara Vincy Gallery, Paris
  • 2013: The Public Poem photographs . Galerij v-editie, Antwerp
  • 2013: The Public Poem, Documentary Show . Emily Harvey Foundation , New York City
  • 2011: Video of the Public Poems 1972–2011 . Whitebox Art Center, New York
  • 2011: The Public Poem Extension Program . Berardelli Foundation, Brescia
  • 2009: Les cages du desir et poèmes visuals . Lara Vincy Gallery, Paris
  • 2007: The Visitor . Galleria Entropyart, Naples
  • 2005: Retrospective 1965–2005 . Spazio Culturale Lazzari, Treviso
  • 2003: Pièges chamaniques . Lara Vincy Gallery, Paris
  • 2002: Piccolo teatro di lampadine sciamaniche . Emily Harvey Gallery, Venice
  • 2001: Little shamanic light bulb theater . Emily Harvey Gallery, New York
  • 2001: La chapelle chamanique . Villa Buttafava Foundation, Gallarate
  • 2000: Alain Arias-Misson . Museo di Bolzano, Bolzano
  • 1998: Shamanic Strips and Your Household Shamans . Galleria Caterina Gualco, Genoa
  • 1998: S hamanix! Emily Harvey Gallery, New York
  • 1996: Arias-Misson, Works from 1974 to 1996 . Farsetti Arte, Prato
  • 1996: Pyramidopolis . Galleria Cruce, Madrid
  • 1995: Angels . Galleria Derbylius, Milan
  • 1994: Installations of Arias-Misson . Domus Jani, Centro Internazionale per lʼArte Totale, Illasi
  • 1988: Floating Mind Theater . Gallery J. & J. Donguy, Paris
  • 1974: Olé, c'est moi le public poem! Studio Santandrea, Milan
  • 1972: Poesia Visiva . Galleria Brescia, Brescia
  • 1972: Arias Mission . American Cultural Center, Brussels
  • 1972: Arias Mission . Galleria Il Canale, Venice
  • 1971: Alain Arias-Misson . Galleria Brescia, Brescia
  • 1971: Alain Arias-Misson . Mercato del Sale, Milan
  • 1970: Alain Arias-Misson , Galleria Tool, Milan
  • 1969: Visual Poëzie . Celbeton, Dendermonde

Group exhibitions (selection)

  • 2022: Seal in 3D. Text sculptures and poetry objects since 1960 . German Book and Writing Museum of the National Library, Leipzig
  • 2022: Sculptural Poetry . Center for artist publications at the Weserburg Museum for Modern Art , Bremen
  • 2021: The word is in the room . Center for artist publications at the Weserburg Museum for Modern Art, Bremen
  • 2021: l'Amour Fou . Palais Lumière, Evian; Musée des Beaux Arts, Quimper; Musée Sainte Croix, Poitiers
  • 2019: 1960s – '70s European Experimental Poetry Archives . Beinecke Library , Yale University
  • 2019: Concrete Poetry, the Paulo della Grazia Collection . Museion, Bolzano
  • 2019: Bernard Heidsieck Prix Littéraire . Musée national d'art moderne – Center Pompidou , Paris.
  • 2014: Venice International Performance Art Week . Palazzo Mora, Venice
  • 2014: Escritura Experimental en España 1963–1983 . Circulo de Bellas Artes, Madrid
  • 2014: La scrittura visuale, la parola totale . Museo Nitsch, Naples
  • 2014: La Idea del Arte . Museo Contemporary, Santander
  • 2014: Visual Poetry . Visconteo Castle, Pavia
  • 2014: Visual Poetry . Palazzo delle Prigioni, Venice
  • 2013: The Character of the Collector . M HKA – Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst, Antwerp
  • 2012: Spirits of Internationalism . Van Abbemuseum , Eindhoven
  • 2009: Encuentros de Pamplona 72: Fin de fiesta del arte experimental . Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia , Madrid
  • 2008: La Parole nell'Arte . MART – Museum of Contemporary Art of Rovereto and Trento, Rovereto
  • 2005: Writing, signs, gestures. Carlfriedrich Claus in the context of Klee to Pollock . Chemnitz art collections
  • 1991: Visual Poetry . Munich art space
  • 1987: On One Word . Gutenberg Museum , Mainz
  • 1987: Literally Literally, Literally Literally . National Gallery Berlin
  • 1986: Poesia Visiva . Museo Santos Rocha, Figueira da Foz; Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon
  • 1985: The Poetic ABC . Bern Art Gallery
  • 1982: Seoul International Mail Art . Go Jeon Gallery, Cheong ju, South Korea
  • 1982: Figure 3 . Leipzig Art Museum
  • 1974: Visual Poetry . ICA, London
  • 1974: Premier Salon d'Art Actuel, Brussels
  • 1974: Feria Internacional de Muestras, Bilbao
  • 1973: Visual Poetry . Gallery Cheap Thrills, Helsinki
  • 1972: Concrete Poetry . Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
  • 1973: Concrete Poetry . New Reform Gallery, Aalst
  • 1972: Concrete Poetry . Jeanne Buytaerts Gallery, Antwerp
  • 1972: Inhibodress, Communications . Surry Hills, Australia
  • 1970: Concrete Poëzie - Visual Teksten . Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
  • 1969: La Scrittura Attiva . Circolo Italsider, Taranto
  • 1967: Il Segno nello Spazio . Azienda Soggiorno e Turismo, Trieste
  • 1967: Poem – Image – Symbol . Falmouth School of Art, Falmouth

Works and documents in collections

Public collections (selection)

  • ZKM – Center for Art and Media , Karlsruhe
  • German Book and Writing Museum of the German National Library, Leipzig
  • Carlfriedrich Claus archive at the Chemnitz Art Collections
  • Sohm Archive at the Staatsgalerie Stuttgart
  • The Ruth and Marvin Sackner Archive of Concrete and Visual Poetry in the University of Iowa Libraries Special Collections
  • Agentzia Press Archives at the Charles Deering McCormick Library of Special Collections at Northwestern University , Evanston and Chicago, IL
  • The Dick Higgins Papers at the Getty Research Institute , Los Angeles, CA
  • The Jean Brown Papers at the Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, CA
  • MART – Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art of Trento and Rovereto , Rovereto
  • Archivio Nuova Scrittura at Museion – Museo di Arte Contemporaneo di Bolzano, Bozen
  • Museo Pecci, Florence
  • Macba – Museu d'Art Contemporani, Barcelona[75]
  • Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid
  • LaM – Lille Métropole, musée d'art moderne, d'art contemporain et d'art brut , Lille
  • Bibliothèque Nationale de France (Cabinet des Estampes), Paris
  • Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
  • M HKA – Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst Antwerp

Private collections (selection)

  • Arturo Schwarz, Milan
  • The Emily Harvey Foundation, New York/Venice
  • Fondazione Bonotto, Colceresa [76]
  • Archivio Lafuente, Santander
  • Archivio Conz, Berlin [77]
  • Anita and Günter Lichtenstein Foundation, Göpfersdorf [78]
  • Collection Paolo Della Grazie, Archivio di Nuova Scrittura – Museo di Arte Contemporaneo di Bolzano, Bolzano
  • Berardelli Foundation, Brescia

Literature

Monographs (selection)

  • Lotta Poetica: Numero Monografico su Arias-Misson . No. February 45, 1975.
  • Mental Theater Boxes . Texts by Peter Frank, Carlfriedrich Claus, Sarenco. Gallery J. & J. Donguy, Paris 1988.
  • Carlfriedrich Claus, Alain Arias-Misson, Klaus Sobolewski . Kunstraum München eV, 1991.
  • Marc Dachy: Alain Arias-Misson. Opera from 1974 to 1996 . Dopotutto, Prato 1996.
  • The visitor: who came from nowhere and is going somewhere else, revisits persons and places and peripeteia . Edizioni Mediterranee, Naples 2009.
  • Alain Arias-Misson – The public poem extension program . Edizioni Fondazione Berardelli, Brescia 2011.
  • The public sinking of Venice poem . Redfox Press and Fondazione Bonotto, Dugort, Achill Island, County Mayo, Ireland 2015.
  • Poesia de calle y poesia de transparencias . Galeria Freijo, Madrid 2015.
  • Joan Brossa & Alain Arias-Misson: de la poetry on la palabra, de la palabra on la calle . Centro Niemeyer, Avilés 2018.
  • Public poems: 50 years of writing on the street . Ediciones Asimétricas, Madrid 2019, ISBN 978-84-949798-0-4 .

Anthologies and catalogs (selection)

  • Jean-François Bory (ed.): Bientôt . Context Production, 1967.
  • Emmett Williams (ed.): An Anthology of Concrete Poetry . Edition Hansjörg Mayer, Stuttgart and New York, Villefranche, Something Else Press, Frankfurt 1967, ISBN 978-0-9851364-3-7 .
  • Artes Hispanicas – Hispanic Arts. A Magazine of Literature, Music and Visual Arts . Vol. I, No. 3-4. The Macmillan Company for Indiana University, New York Winter 1968.
  • Visual poetry. Visual Poetry. Visual poetry. Visual poetry . Exhibitions of Visual Poetry 1968 . Karlsruhe - Alpbach - Innsbruck - Vienna, Aller Heiligenpresse, Innsbruck 1968.
  • Novisima Poesia . Museo Provincial de Bellas Artes, La Plata, Argentina 1969.
  • Mostra de Poesia Concreta . Stamperia di Venezia, Venice 1969.
  • Eugene Wildman (ed.): Experiments in Prose . Swallow Press, Chicago 1969.
  • Spatialism, Concrete Poetry . ASA Chikyudo Gallery, Tokyo 1971.
  • Liesbeth Crommelin (ed.): Klankteksten - Concrete Poëzie - Visual Teksten . Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam 1970.
  • One word! Aspects of visual poetry and music . Gutenberg Museum/Edition Braus, Mainz 1987, ISBN 978-3-921524-64-0 .
  • Michael Glasmeier (Ed.): Literally literally, literally literally . State Museums of Prussian Cultural Heritage, Berlin 1987, ISBN 978-3-88609-209-3 .
  • Beyond words. Experimental poetry and the avant-garde . Yale University, Bainecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Yale 2019. PDF

Notes

  1. Arias-Misson wrote several articles on the work of Carlfriedrich Claus.[8][9]
  2. The correspondence with both these poets is now held by the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University.[3]
  3. Discussion of the friendship between Arias-Misson and de Vree.[15]:68–73
  4. See [16][17][18][19][20]
  5. See [21][22][23][24]
  6. See catalogs from ASA Chikyudo Gallery, Japan[30][31][32][33]
  7. See [36][37]
  8. In the The Chomsky Generative Grammar Public Poem, Arias-Misson pays homage to the philosopher.[39] See [15]:44–47
  9. For philosophical influences see the interview with Jacques Donguy.[15]:90–99
  10. See [15][41][42]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Böning, Renate (2021). Beyer, Andreas; Savoy, Bénédicte; Tegethoff, Wolf (eds.). "Arias-Misson, Alain". General Artist Lexicon - International Artist Database (Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon - Internationale Künstlerdatenbank - Online). Berlin, New York: K. G. Saur. Retrieved October 7, 2023.
  2. Kostelanetz, Richard (2000). A Dictionary of the Avant-Gardes (PDF) (second ed.). New York: Schirmer Books. p. 27. Retrieved October 14, 2023.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Alain Arias-Misson". Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library. Retrieved October 7, 2023.
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