This video is only three minutes and forty-seven seconds long, but there is a sense of ordered chaos throughout. While the text is ever-changing, in constant shades of blue, red, grey, and green, the audio plays music and speech in a way that overlaps and yet blends together into one large collective work. Furthermore, the work website for LETTERS FROM THE ARCHIVERSE reveals a more interactive space, in which readers can click through varying forms of text, enlarging and shrinking certain words and phrases as they navigate through. See . On this page, it is noted by the authors that "Looking takes longer than reading", and this is a fascinating insight into the ways in which the digital media space in this project is developed with the intention that the way we view and process words and phrases becomes more impactful then the way we read them all together.
With both the video and the worksite at hand, it is easy to see that this particular piece of digital media functions in a new and innovative way. By using design software to create a dynamic and observable space, in which poetry and digital poetics take centre stage, both Johnson and Klobucar have created visually performative language which gives new meaning to the conception of digital poetics, and how we read, compared to how we can observe, poetry and its meaning.
Poetry knows no bounds. In LETTERS FROM THE ARCHIVERSE, Jeff T. Johnson and Andrew Klobucar have created a memory palace of poetry in AutoCAD, a popular computer-aided design platform traditionally used to render engineering schematics and architectural blueprints. A program designed to place points, lines, and curves within the abstract geometry of Cartesian space, AutoCAD also renders text as a series of vectors. Rather than the bitmapped, rasterized text of PhotoShop or Microsoft Word, AutoCAD’s font faces are generated from complex sets of mathematical equations. As such, they can be blown up, stretched out, squashed down, and zoomed in with no information loss. Software that was never intended as a platform for creative writing is pushed, pulled, and prodded into something in between a word processor and a rendering tool--concrete poetry imagined at both macro and micro scales like a literalized version of Marcus Novak’s “liquid architectures in cyberspace.”
Discussion
This is my final draft, I had
This is my final draft, I had some formatting issues! Sorry about that.
Thanks, Maria!
Thanks, Maria!