SEEN AS READ : Online Course

An online course beginning March 14th 2021. Seven weeks. £200.  All information & booking at www.poembrut.com/courses
What are the possibilities of poetry on the page, or screen, beyond, or expanding with, its semantic content? Far from being a domain of contemporary experimentation in marginal literatures, what we know as visual poetry reaches back into the very origins of poetry, far more than more formal, mainstream writing. This online course exposes the roots of the language arts, from cave paintings to undecipherable manuscripts, before touching upon the possibilities of the modern visual poetry by taking in great swathes of modern art engaged with text. We explore Asemic writing, Collage Poetry, Concrete Poetry, Art Poetry, Minimalism, Poster Poetry and Originary Visual Poetry in a course rooted in making over theory, method over all else.

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The Voynich Manuscript / Sophie Podolski / Judit Reigl / Annagret Soltau / Seiichi Niikuni

Poet-artists featured on the course will range from the historical to the contemporary, taken from all over the globe - from canonical modern artists to "outsider" poets, from Laszlo Moholy-Nagy to Henry Michaux, Bob Cobbing to Rosaire Appel, Sophie Calle to Sophie Podolski, Jean Michel Basquiat to Cy Twombly.

A note on: Seen as Read - arguably my favourite course

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I always try to try all iterations of professional creative work once. Running adult courses face to face, with lots of different institutions, has been one of the most up and down endeavours for me. Some have created extraordinary new pathways for me, and loads of new friendships, genuinely. Others have been draining, pressured experiences, where participants use the format to unload after a hard day at work. I’m always up for doing them at new places, but when I had done online courses in the past, I found them rewarding but difficult - the removed nature tends to obfuscate the main reason I teach - to meet people, to communicate. Recently, with the lockdown bla blah I decided to go again, more seriously than before and set up a course called Seen as Read. I wrote entirely new material for it, blended that with previous explorations. I put my heart into it really, as it felt a new venture, a new moment. It has just ended and is perhaps the most exciting, rewarding, generous experience I have had teaching, including face to face work. The level of those involved, the insight, generosity, innovation - it really felt like a brief community. So many people signed up, which was inevitably very validating, and then so much support was offered for my approach, detailing a prehistoric to present history of visual poetries, then going into asemic writing, art poetry, poster art, text art, concrete poetry, collage and the like, this also was uplifting. The screenshot above shows the tiles of the blogforum set up as our interface. Each tile represents a post by a participant poet, each filled with their work and thoughts, responding to the themes of the week. Extraordinary. You can look at the work too, it’s now made publicly available with the permission of the poets https://seenasread.blogspot.com/ & https://visualpoetrycourse.blogspot.com/

A note on : Seen as Read - online course on Visual Poetry

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An online course beginning September 14th 2020, running for seven weeks. £200.  All information & booking at www.poembrut.com/courses

What are the possibilities of poetry on the page, or screen, beyond, or expanding with, its semantic content? Far from being a domain of contemporary experimentation in marginal literatures, what we know as visual poetry reaches back into the very origins of poetry, far more than more formal, mainstream writing. This online course exposes the roots of the language arts, from cave paintings to undecipherable manuscripts, before touching upon the possibilities of the modern manifestations of visual poetry - Asemic writing, Collage Poetry, Concrete Poetry, Art Poetry and Photo Poetry. This is a course rooted in making over theory, method over all else. 

Poet-artists featured on the course will range from the historical to the contemporary, from canonical modern artists to "outsider" poets, from Laszlo Moholy-Nagy to Henry Michaux, Bob Cobbing to Rosaire Appel, Sophie Calle to Sophie Podolski, Jean Michel Basquiat to Cy Twombly.

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A note on : Schopenhauer, 19th Circle project - read a letter

Nice to be a part of this, Nineteenth Circle https://www.nineteenthcircle.co.uk/ - a group of 19th Century-specialist performers who are producing a variety of interesting projects to expand interest, range and complexity in the canon of the 19th c - are doing video readings with artists, musicians and writers with their favourite letters from the time period. They asked me, very generous, and I chose the famous letter Johanna Schopenhauer wrote to her son Arthur, basically calling one of the intellectual giants of the modern age an annoying, big-headed jessop. I like this letter so much because Schopenhauer is the thinker who switched my focus to serious reading and thinking beyond instinct and conformity, and who put me into philosophy as an undertaking. Yet, within a few years, I had given that up, and it was precisely because of what was intimated in this letter. There is lived wisdom and there is a intellectual brilliance. It is a balance, I think. But I met, and perhaps was myself, lots of young Schopenhauers, who were very clever but not very clever. Schopenhauer’s philosophy is monumental, it changed the world, its influence on say Freud and Wittgenstein alone altered the modern mind, but that didn’t stop him being, when young, a proper fish. Lessons to learn.

A note on: Poem Brut III at Rich Mix and smashing closed my exhibition

Another remarkable night for the Poem Brut events. There is a community forming around the notion of literary performance through these events which is warm and welcoming but is producing some challenging, though often very funny, poetry. It feels, though early in the Poem Brut project which took years to begin, that the concept of the events, like with The Enemies Project, has grand potential.

The event also saw the closing of my exhibition Hard to Read. It was a privilege to have space at the Rich Mix for a whole month, but the exhibition was a collecting of previous things rather than a showing of that which is new, so I felt I needed to close it down with something memorable. 

A note on : Learning to letterpress for 'Hard to Read' exhibition

Had a grand time at the London Print studio, on the grand union canal no less, learning how to manually work a letterpress and how to turn works into photopolymer plates, in order to create a limited edition run of pansemic poems and new minimalist poems for my upcoming exhibition Hard to Read, at the Rich Mix this December. www.stevenjfowler.com/hardtoread

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