Sunday, June 19, 2011
Saturday, June 18, 2011
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Satu Kaikkonen on asemic writing
What is asemic writing? I think there’s no one answer to that question. I found many interesting links while trying to found an answer to this question.
1) The asemic.net and Tim Gaze gives us one answer. http://www.asemic.net/
2) Tom Venning has also interesting ideas about asemic writing. http://www.tomvenning.com/asemic.htm
3) The third interesting link I found was in here http://wn.com/Asemic_writing
4) Simon Crab writes about asemic writing at stalker like this http://crab.wordpress.com/2008/07/02/free-writing/
I think from asemic writing like this “As a creator of asemics, I consider myself an explorer and a global storyteller. Asemic art, after all, represents a kind of language that's universal and lodged deep within our unconscious minds. Regardless of language identity, each human's initial attempts to create written language look very similar and, often, quite asemic. In this way, asemic art can serve as a sort of common language -- albeit an abstract, post-literate one -- that we can use to understand one another regardless of background or nationality. For all its limping-functionality, semantic language all too often divides and asymmetrically empowers while asemic texts can't help but put people of all literacy-levels and identities on equal footing.
Since asemic writing emphasizes the visual, representational quality of language, it creates a unique dialogue between the writer/reader and the world of signs, one that allows for multiple, subjective acts of decoding. This paradoxical, cosmopolitan-yet-personal quality, I think, lends asemic writing a hyper-contemporary sense of being and makes it much more than art. I read it, in fact, as an archetypal language, as a (recon)figuration of the words spoken by the Babel-builders. Asemic texts, as it were, serve as a projection of humanity's desire to reconnect with the mythological root of all languages and, by extension, one another.” This representation was published in the SCRIPT issue 1.1. January 2010
Since asemic writing emphasizes the visual, representational quality of language, it creates a unique dialogue between the writer/reader and the world of signs, one that allows for multiple, subjective acts of decoding. This paradoxical, cosmopolitan-yet-personal quality, I think, lends asemic writing a hyper-contemporary sense of being and makes it much more than art. I read it, in fact, as an archetypal language, as a (recon)figuration of the words spoken by the Babel-builders. Asemic texts, as it were, serve as a projection of humanity's desire to reconnect with the mythological root of all languages and, by extension, one another.” This representation was published in the SCRIPT issue 1.1. January 2010
I think we can never describe (or understund) asemic writing completely, but should we even do that? I like what Simon Crab says “The meaning of asemic writing is implied and hinted at through abstraction. Meaning can be deduced by intuition and instinct – a natural understanding of shape or in shamanic religious work, through a power held in the design (usually transmitted through the artists from an external, mystical source). Asemic writing is art without rules; a form defined completely by the creator.” Let’s enjoy about that and give a chance to this fascinating “language and space.”
15.6.2011
Satu Kaikkonen
A Visual Poet and An Asemic Writer from Finland
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
//Opening TCOP electric avenue, Museums Quartier with _̲̲̲̲̲̅̅̅_ _̲̲̲̲̲̲̲̲̲̅̅̅̅̅̅̅_̲̲̲̲̲̲̲̲̅̅̅̅̅_̲̲̅ ̲__̲̅̅̅̅_̲̅_─ ̲̲̲̲̲̲͋̅̅̅̅_̲̅
This friday the Collapse of PAL will be opened at the WORM_space at Electric avenue, in the Museums Quartier in Vienna. There will be some wine and possible surprise concert .... @#^&*()_
Monday, June 13, 2011
Sunday, June 12, 2011
Saturday, June 11, 2011
Friday, June 10, 2011
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