Issue 144

Summer & Fall 2013

Image from When Walt Whitman Was a Little Girl

Cinepoetry John D. Scott Cinepoetry John D. Scott

One Art

CONTRIBUTOR’S NOTE

How do you shoot loss? I think it’s an interesting challenge because loss is conceptual and based on something not being there. And so where does one begin finding an image or a sound to represent absence?

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Cinepoetry Martha McCollough Cinepoetry Martha McCollough

Soup Opera

CONTRIBUTOR’S NOTE

Often the temptation when working with animation is the too­-faithful illustration of a text. As with film, there’s the tradition of storyboarding, which tends to nail down visual possibilities before they are fully explored, treats the text as primary, and can hardly help being linear.

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Cinepoetry Jim Haverkamp Cinepoetry Jim Haverkamp

When Walt Whitman Was a Little Girl

CONTRIBUTOR’S NOTE

“When Walt Whitman was a little girl, she’d never let the ordinariness of things box her in.”

This is the first line of M. C. Biegner’s poem, and it knocked me flat. A manifesto for art-making, this. An irresistibly intriguing beginning, followed by a simple statement about how to imagine one’s way out of corners. It opened a lot of doors for me.

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