Language to Cover a Page: The Early Writings by Vito Acconci


Language to Cover a Page: The Early Writings
Title : Language to Cover a Page: The Early Writings
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0262012243
ISBN-10 : 9780262012249
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 428
Publication : First published March 3, 2006

Poems and other texts from the 1960s by a pioneering conceptual artist that show a continuity with his subsequent work in performance and video art. Pioneering conceptual artist Vito Acconci began his career as a poet. In the 1960s, before beginning his work in performance and video art, Acconci studied at the Iowa Writers Workshop and published poems in journals and chapbooks. Almost all of this work remains unknown; much of it appeared in the self-produced magazines of the Lower East Side's mimeo revolution, and many other pieces were never published. Language to Cover a Page collects these writings for the first time and not only shows Acconci to be an important experimental writer of the period, but demonstrates the continuity of his early writing with his later work in film, video, and performance.

Language to Cover a Page documents a key moment in the unprecedented intersection of artists and poets in the late 1960s--as seen in the Dwan Gallery's series of Language shows (1967-1970) and in Acconci's own journal 0 to 9. Indeed, as Acconci moved from the poetry scene to the art world, his poetry became increasingly performative while his artwork was often structured and motivated by linguistic play.

Acconci's early writing recalls the work of Samuel Beckett, the deadpan voice of the nouveau roman, and the jump cuts and fraught permutations of the nouvelle vague. Poems in Language to Cover a Page explore the materiality of language (language as matter and not ideas, as Robert Smithson put it), the physical space of the page, and the physicality of source texts (phonebooks, thesauruses, dictionaries). Other poems take the space of the page as an analogue to performance space or implicate the poem in a network of activity (as in his Dial-a-Poem pieces). Readers will find Acconci's inventive and accomplished poetry as edgy and provocative as anything published today.


Language to Cover a Page: The Early Writings Reviews


  • M.W.P.M.

    Language to Cover a Page is divided into six sections: "Idiom", "Printed Matter", "Four Books and Related Text", "Transference and Related Text", "Translations", and "Discourse Networks"...

    from "Section I: Idiom"...

    1. The cup The cup is there.

    2. I take the cup. I take the cup to be there.

    3. The ball. The ball moves there.

    4. I take the ball, moving, to be there. I take the ball.

    5. The Cup. Is there one?

    6. The cup is there. Is there one?

    7. The ball. Moves.

    8. The ball moves there. The moves.

    9. When he said, "The cup is there," I knew there was a cup.

    10. When he said, "The cup," I knew the cup was there, to the right, where he pointed.
    - pg. 5

    *

    (he asked) (what happened) (when it went) (on)
    (he asked) (around)
    (he asked) (about)
    (it)
    (he asked)
    ("What happened when) (. . . ?") (there was)
    (a question) (like) (this) (as)
    (to the rest)
    (he asked) (again)
    ("What happened when) (it went) (on?")
    (she answered) (that)
    (she answered) (it) (then)
    (she answered) (that it went) (off)
    (she answered) (this) (:)
    (that it went) (off)
    (she answered) (back) (really) ("It went off.")
    - pg. 12

    *

    He holds out a weight with arm out --
    And then puts it down and waits.

    He tries to think to remember a name --
    And finally finds out: "Nan."
    - pg. 25

    *

    small
    round
    loose
    heavy
    blue
    slanted
    flat
    shorter
    hard
    parallel
    wide
    straight
    bright
    smooth
    shallow
    heavier
    folded
    curved
    rough
    tall
    uneven
    faded
    soft
    wooden
    horizontal
    blurred
    green
    circular
    sharp
    open
    identical
    light
    rippled
    thin
    hollow
    broken
    large
    - pg. 36

    *

    When I am reading this
    I am upside down when
    - pg. 39

    *

    Then it was set down there (and)
    Then and there (and) There it was
    (and) You have it (and) Here
    it is (and) It is set (and) One
    down (and) There is none now (end)
    - pg. 45

    *

    Now I am here. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
    Now I am here. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
    Now I am here. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
    Now I am here. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
    Now I am here. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
    Now I am here. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
    Now I am here. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
    Now I am here. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
    Now I am here. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
    Now I am here. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
    - pg. 54

    *

    I have made my point
    I make it again
    It
    Now you get the point.
    - pg. 55

    *

    I am here
    (again)
    (again)
    (again)
    I am here as I go by
    (gain)
    (gain)
    (gain)
    - pg. 56

    *

    I am here.
    I am here as I go by.
    I do it, go into the other.
    I do without it, stop outside.
    - pg. 57

    *

    I am going from one side to the other.
    am
    going
    from
    one
    side
    to
    the
    other.
    - pg. 69


    from "Section II: Printed Matter"...
    9 bricks
    9 sheets of paper

    * * *

    8 pieces of burlap
    8 sheets of paper

    * * *

    7 pieces of fiber glass
    7 sheets of paper

    * * *

    6 flagstones
    6 sheets of paper

    * * *

    5 pieces of marble
    5 sheets of paper

    * * *

    4 pieces of pig-iron
    4 sheets of paper

    * * *

    3 piece of plastic
    3 sheets of paper

    * * *

    2 tiles
    2 sheets of paper

    * * *

    1 wooden plank
    1 sheet of paper

    * * *

    46 pieces of material
    - pg. 93-102

    *

    A SHEET a sheet a sheet 'a sheet' covers this page
    and protects it from coffee stains, etc.,
    that are on another level, we're on another level now, etc.
    - A SHEET, pg. 119


    from "Section III: Four Books and Related Text"...
    chore door fore gore hear core corps lore score FOUR
    cook hook look hook rook brook crook shook took BOOK

    - pg. 153

    *
    I.

    1.
    he called her, hello.

    1.
    He called her Helen.

    1.
    He called her, heeling.

    1.
    He called her healing.

    1.
    He called her heeling.

    I.

    1.
    She called him back.

    1.
    Her was the front.

    1.
    Back again, she called him back.

    1.
    This was the unexposed side.

    1.
    It was an insult to him.

    1.
    She called him down

    [...]
    - ONCE, pg. 190


    from "Section IV: Transference and Related Text"...
    1
    N.
    s
    a
    m
    a
    s
    n
    l
    l
    s
    l
    e
    l
    p
    e
    p
    re
    t
    c
    t
    f
    f
    l
    d
    d
    b
    m
    es
    n
    3
    c
    5
    s
    r
    Ad
    t
    p
    i
    u
    t
    c
    e
    n
    v
    s
    p
    l
    p
    re
    t
    a
    g
    r

    INSTALLATION, LEFT MARGIN: FROM PAGE 1, ROGET'S THESAURUS (ST. MARTIN'S PRESS, 1965), TO PAGE 241, LANGAUAGE TO COVER A PAGE.
    - Transference, pg. 241


    from "Section V: Translations"...
    .
    he moved slowly along the road
    .
    he wanted to keep moving, no matter what the obstacle
    .
    the plot of the drama moves swiftly
    .
    a melody that moves smoothly
    .
    they remained outside the town for about one day and then moved inside and began the campaign
    .
    it was getting late and I thought it was time to be moving
    .
    in chess the bishop moves diagonally
    .
    his turn to move
    .
    she did not like small towns and decided to move to the city
    .
    they had a line of good that was moving very slowly
    .
    some books in public libraries hardly even seem to move
    .
    so frightened that she stood rigid and didn't move
    .
    I though she moved slightly when we were introduced, but it was impossible to be sure
    .
    the boat moved slowly from side to side at its mooring as the wind rose
    .
    he pushed and pushed but the door wouldn't move
    .
    for a while there was not much to do, bu suddenly things really began to move
    .
    in him we live, and move, and have our being
    .
    now he moves in only the nest of circles
    .
    you must move very carefully so as not to offend her
    .
    the time has come for us to make up our mind and move
    .
    the delegate moved for a reconsideration of the suggestion
    - PINPOINT (POINT OF VIEW): 3, pg. 281

    *
    about
    above
    across
    against
    around
    aside
    away
    back
    behind
    below
    between
    by
    down
    east
    far
    forward
    here
    in
    into
    left
    near
    north
    on
    onto
    over
    right
    south
    there
    through
    to
    under
    up
    upon
    west
    with

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
    FOUR SIDES (ON EDGE) : margins to an indeterminate space
    - pg.

    *

    mutilate, ventilate, cancellate, flagellate | levitate, occulate, edentate, segmentate

    -- SHIFT: LINE 6, PAGE 6, WHITEFIELD'S UNIVERSITY RHYMING DICTIONARY (NEW TORK: CROWELL, 1951; APOLLO EDITION, 1964)

    - pg. 319

    *

    description
    - REMOVAL, MOVE (LINE OF EVIDENCE), pg. 368


    from "Section VI: Discourse Networks"...
    This is a reference to one cubic inch of the snow piled at the curb in front
    of the parking meter in front of the first vertical row of panes on the door
    at 82 Christopher Street, New York City, today.
    - REFERENCE WORK: MEASURE, WEATHER, LOCATION, TIME, pg. 380

    *

    1. The sun rises today, Thursday, December 26, 1968
    2. At 7:18 A.M., sets at 4:34 P.M., and will rise
    3. tomorrow at 7:18 A.M. The moon sets today at 11:49
    4. rises at 12:10 P.M. tomorrow, and will set tomorrow
    5. at 12:38 A.M. Warmer weather and clear to cloudy skies
    6. will cover most of the eastern portion of the nation
    7. today while snow is expected to fall on the western
    8. lake region, the Northern Plains States, and from
    9. the upper Mississippi Valley to the plateau region. Showers
    10. will fall on Arkansas, southern Arizona, and New
    11. Mexico. Colder temperatures will be felt from the Western
    12. Plains States temperatures will be felt from the Western
    13. Plains States to the Pacific Coast. Snow and snow
    14. flurries fell over much of the nation yesterday,
    15. centering in sections of New England, the Ohio Valley,
    16. the lake region, and the Northern and Central Plains
    17. were felt in the Southeast while cold weather was the rule
    18. elsewhere. Rain fell over the Southwest and along
    19. the Pacific Coast. As of 11 P.M. in New York City,
    20. it will be sunny today, high twenty to twenty-five, winds
    21. northwesterly fifteen to twenty miles an hour becoming
    22. variable and diminishing to about ten miles an hour
    23. tomorrow; fair tonight, low fifteen to twenty. Cloudy
    [...]
    - Act 3, Scene 4, pg. 389

    *

    1. The ten rules for walking down 52nd Avenue, between Haspel Street and Van Horn Street, Queens, New York.

    2. The ten rules for walking down 85th Street, between 69th Avenue and 67th Avenue, Queens, New York.

    3. The ten rules for walking down Hillside Avenue, between Seward Avenue and 87th Avenue, Queens, New York.

    4. The ten rules for walking down Maple Street, between Schenectedy Avenue and Troy Avenue, Queens, New York.

    5. The ten rules for walking down Linden Boulevard, between Barbey Street and Schenk Avenue, Queens, New York.

    6. The ten rules for walking down 99th Street, between 158th Avenue and 159th Avenue, Queens, New York.

    7. The ten rules for walking down Weller Avenue, between 241st Street and Brookville Boulevard, Queens, New York.

    8. The ten rules for walking down Beach Avenue, between Gotham Avenue and Florence Avenue, Brooklyn, New York.

    9. The ten rules for walking down Ocean Promenade, between Beach 58th Street and Beach 57th Street, Queens, New York.

    10. The ten rules for walking down McNeil Boulevard, between Ocean Boulevard and Park Street, Nassau Country, Long Island, New York.
    - TEN SITUATIONS, pg. 401

    *

    Begin: When I'm well into walking and can be
    - My Performance of "I'm Walking", pg. 404

    *

    a b
    a box rolls, on
    a box, rolls, on, too
    x y
    - Unfinished, pg. 408