Showing posts with label 1972. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1972. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 August 2023

Bibliography 1972-

 






"A writer/artist who is creating a unique place in the late C20th  counterculture." - Tenth Muse

Allen, Tim, Two Terrible Twins from Phlebas, Terrible Work 1, 1993
Allen, Tim, Emotional Geology, Terrible Work 2, 1993
Allen, Tim, Two Riders One Horse, Terrible Work 2, 1993
Allen, Tim, Ladder to the Next Floor Stride Magazine 1-33, Terrible Work 2., 1993
Allen, Tim, The Xantras, Terrible Work 3, 1994
Allen, Tim, Dream Vortex, Terrible Work 8, 1998
Allen, Tim, Earth Ascending An Anthology of Living Poetry, Terrible Work 8, 1998
Allen, Tim, Colour of Dust by A C Evans, Terrible Work 9, 1999
Allen, Tim/Kirke, Alexis, Trombone Pamphlets Received, Terrible Work 8 , 1998
Allen, Tim/Kirke, Alexis, Very Recommendable Stride Books Received, Terrible Work 8 , 1998
Anonymous, Witty Notes on all the Jazz Books (BWT 13 Oct 1972), Braintree & Witham Times, 1972
Anonymous, A's Jazz Catalogue (EWN 12 Oct 1972), Essex Weekly News, 1972
Anonymous, Exosphere A C Evans, The Lamp Of Thoth 14, 1984
Anonymous, Exosphere, Unknown Source, 1984
Anonymous, Decaying Orbits, Scavenger's Newsletter, 1987
Anonymous, Decaying Orbits, The Lamp Of Thoth 20, 1987
Anonymous, Incisive Exposures [Neon Aeon I-V], Frontal Lobe 2, 1995
Anonymous, Angels of Rancid Glamour, PQR (Poetry Quarterly Review) 11, 1998
Anonymous, A C Evans is both the poet and the artist…, Zene 14, 1998
Anonymous, Artist-Poet A C Evans, Ixion 6 , 1999
Austin, Dave, Letters to the Editor [The Bards 1 A C Evans], The Supplement 18, 2005
Barber, Andrew, Such As This, Pulsar Poetry Webzine 15 (67) June 2013,
Barford, Emma, In a Desperate Museum, 10th Muse 5, 1994
Berry, Jake, Responses to A C Evans' Essay Voices in Denial,The Argotist Online, 2006
Bird, Polly, A C Evans Colour of Dust, New Hope International Online, 1999
Blackstone, Leonard, Blackstone's Chippings (Space Opera), TOPS 131, 1998
Bowles, Ebenezer, Delusions of Cosmic Destiny, Planet Clio, 2009
Bradshaw, Paul, Burning Man, Dark Fantasy Newsletter 6, 1999
Brainstorm, Johnny, The Future Was Electric, International Times Oct 2016, 2016
Brooks, Neil, Fractured Moods Vol II, Pulsar Poetry Webzine 15 (67) June 2013,
Bruinsma, Max, Exploding Cinema. Rotterdam Film Course, Sandberg Institute, 1999
Bugle, L, Decaying Orbits, Nox 4, 1987
Callison, J. D, Letter to Rupert M Loydell [Memories of the Future], Unpublished, 1999
Carroll, Pete, Letters to the Editor [Hermetic Art Gnostic Alchemy of the Imagination], Nox 2, 1986
Dafies, Aeronwy, Monas Hieroglyphica 11 and Marginalia, Redsine 4 Online , 2001
Daunt, Will, Pulsar 40 [Even Anarchists], New Hope International Online, 2005
Duncan, Andrew, Responses to A C Evans' Essay Voices in Denial, The Argotist Online, 2006
Duxbury-Hibbert, Susan A, Words from Nowhere (interview), Unpublished, 1996
Finch, Peter, Colour of Dust, Buzz Magazine, 1999
Foley, Jack, Responses to A C Evans' Essay Voices in Denial, The Argotist Online, 2006
Fra Enotomy, Letters to the Editor [The Nightmare of Rejection], The Lamp of Thoth Vol III No 1, 1984
Friend, Sean Russell, Alien Autopsy, Dark Fantasy Newsletter 6, 1999
Friend, Sean Russell, On The Ubiquitous Steve Sneyd, Dark Fantasy Newsletter 6, 1999
Gimblett, John, The Luminous Boat (Work on 2 Paintings by Carl Hoffer), Stride 29, 1987
Grimbleby, David, The Unmagical Art of Salvador Dali, The Lamp Of Thoth 20, 1987
Haines, John F, Colour of Dust A C Evans, Handshake 36, 1999
Haines, John F, Memories of the Future, Handshake 36 , 1999
Haines, John F, Outlaw 2, Handshake 53, 2003
Hamilton, Michael, A Ship To Nowhere, Touchpaper 8, 1998
Hanson, Matt/ Walter, Shane R J, onedotzero3 , Film Four/ICA, 1999
Haynes, Lara, Decaying Orbits, Not Dead But Dreaming Vol XII, 2000
Healy, Randolph, Burning Man An Iconic Narrative, New Hope International Review, 1999
Henderson, Neil K, Letters to the Editor [Woman By A Lake], The Supplement 39, 2008
Henderson, Neil K, Letters to the Editor [Watch This Space], The Supplement 56, 2011
Hooper, Emma, An Interview With RML… [Trajectories/Worlds Known and Not], 10th Muse 7, 1996
Jebb, Keith, A C Evans Space Opera/A C Evans Dream Vortex, PQR (Poetry Quarterly Review), 1998
Jope, Norman, A C Evans Graphic Work Is Featured…, Memes 1, 1989
Jope, Norman, Five Steps, Memes 1, 1989
Jope, Norman, Stride 32, Memes 1, 1989
Jope, Norman, In The Forest of Signs [Occult Connections], Memes 4, 1990
Jope, Norman, Creative Intelligence is as Evident…, Memes 8, 1993
Jope, Norman, Between Alien Worlds , Memes 9, 1994
Jope, Norman, Conversation Piece Number Two [Genteel Outsiders], Memes 9, 1994
Jope, Norman, Timbers Across The Sun, Memes 9, 1994
Jope, Norman, Kingdom of the (Hairless) Heart, Tears in the Fence 24, 1999
Jope, Norman, Ascended Ravens, Tears in the Fence 27, 2000
Jordan, Andrew, Meaning as Artifice [The Inscrutable World], 10th Muse 7, 1996
Kimber, Eve, Vespula Vanishes & Other Poems, Pulsar Poetry Webzine June 2011,
Kirke, Alexis, A Pamphlet To Be Reckoned With [Zones of Impulse], Terrible Work 5, 1995
Kirke, Alexis, The Inscrutable World by A C Evans & Rupert Loydell, Terrible Work 6, 1996
Kopaska-Merkel, David C, Space Opera, Dreams and Nightmares, 1997
Lee, Emma, Dream Vortex, 10th Muse 10, 2000
Lee, Emma, Memories of the Future Tales of the Burning Man, 10th Muse 10, 2000
Lenkiewicz, Alice, Fractured Muse by A C Evans, Neon Highway 7, 2004
Light, John, Review of The Bards 1, 2 and 3, Atlantean Publishing Online, 2005
Lightman, Ira, Responses to A C Evans' Essay Voices in Denial, The Argotist Online, 2006
Lockey, Paul J, A C Evans takes a short surreal train ride…, Unhinged 3 , 1999
Loydell, Rupert, The Stride Interview, Stride 20, 1985
Loydell, Rupert, The Third Alternative, Stride 36, 1994
Loydell, Rupert, Stranger Here Myself (Intro: Colour of Dust), Stride, 1999
Loydell, Rupert, Poetry Is Radar, X-Peri, 2016
Loydell, Rupert, Take It Or Leave It, International Times Dec 2021,
Marsh, Jane, Jane Marsh Interviews The Poet A C Evans, Neon Highway 12 Online, 2006
Marsh, Jane, Jane Marsh Interviews The Poet A C Evans (The Illustrated Jane), Neon Highway 13, 2008
Masoliver, Carmina, Poetry and Paint Future, Poetry and Paint Oct 2015,
McMahon, Gary, Deathmasques VI Silence by A C Evans, Ookami Online, 2004
Orange, Thomas M, On Authorial Voice [Voices in Denial], Heuriskein Online, 2007
Oxley, William, Thirty Three Steps Towards Stride, University of Salzburg, 1993
Pearce, Brian Louis, Exosphere A C Evans, Stride 16, 1984
Perloff, Marjorie, Responses to A C Evans' Essay Voices in Denial,The Argotist Online, 2006
Plevin, John, Fractured Moods Vol I, Pulsar Poetry Webzine 14 (66) March 2013,
Poison Quill, This Sepulchre Avant-Goth Poems by A C Evans, The Seventh Seal 4, 2001
Reed, Chris, Colour of Dust, The BBR Directory, 1999
Rippon, Graham, Fractured Moods, Carillon 34, 2012
Searles, A Langley, Three Titles of A C Evans have recently…, Fantasy Commentator 52, 2000
Side, Jeffrey, A C Evans The Bards 1, New Hope International Online, 2004
Side, Jeffrey, Interview by Jeffrey Side, The Argotist Online, 2006
Side, Jeffrey, Note From The Editor, The Argotist Online, 2006
Smith, Barbara, A C Evans Fractured Muse, New Hope International Online, 2005
Smith, Sam, Such As This, The Journal 36 (46) May 2012,
Smith, Sam, Out Of The Velvet Womb, The Journal 38 (48) Feb 2013,
Smith, Sam, Fractured Moods, The Journal 39 (49) Apr 2013
Sneyd, Steve, Between Alien Worlds, Data Dump 9, 1994
Sneyd, Steve, Mystical/Speculative…, Data Dump 9, 1994
Sneyd, Steve, Space Opera An Interview with A C Evans, Fantasy Commentator 47/48, 1995
Sneyd, Steve, Flights From The Iron Moon, The Hilltop Press, 1995
Sneyd, Steve, Dream Vortex, Data Dump 22, 1997
Sneyd, Steve, Foreword to Space Opera, Stride Publications, 1997
Sneyd, Steve, Visions by Association (Interview), Stride Publications, 1997
Sneyd, Steve, Space Opera, Data Dump 25, 1998
Sneyd, Steve, A Ship to Nowhere, Data Dump 31, 1998
Sneyd, Steve, Two Genre Anthologies… Data Dump 37, 1999
Sneyd, Steve, A C Evans The Stone Door, Data Dump 43, 1999
Sneyd, Steve, Also A C Evans Space Opera poem sequence, Data Dump 43, 1999
Sneyd, Steve, Colour of Dust, Data Dump 43, 1999
Sneyd, Steve, Memories of the Future, Data Dump 43, 1999
Sneyd, Steve, Swan of Yuggoth, Data Dump 44, 1999
Sneyd, Steve, The Burning Man Spacerock Fest, Data Dump 45, 2000
Sneyd, Steve, A C Evans This Sepulchre, Data Dump 49, 2000
Sneyd, Steve, Only Our Opinion [Colour of Dust], Twink 18, 2000
Sneyd, Steve, Fractured Muse, Data Dump 68, 2003
Sneyd, Steve, We Are Glad You Have Come (Sleeping Galaxy), Stark 27, 2003
Sneyd, Steve, A C Evans SF Poetry Sequence Space Opera [Interview by Jane Marsh], Data Dump 104, 2006
Sneyd, Steve, Coinicidentally in the On-Line Interview [Interview by Jane Marsh], Data Dump 104, 2006
Sneyd, Steve, Vespula Vanishes & Other Poems, Data Dump 118, 2008
Sneyd, Steve, Matters Arising [Lust for a Vampire], Data Dump 119, 2008
Sneyd, Steve, Term Speculative Poetry has more definitions, perhaps…, Data Dump 128, 2008
Sneyd, Steve, Significant Number Issue # 75 of Handshake, Data Dump 129, 2008
Sneyd, Steve, Letters to the Editor [Weirdstuff], The Supplement 42, 2008
Sneyd, Steve, Neogaea And Its Strange Satellite Neon, Data Dump 148, 2010
Sneyd, Steve, This Word Image Mosaic Project, Data Dump 152, 2010
Sneyd, Steve, Avant Goth, Data Dump 161, 2011
Sneyd, Steve, Fractured Moods, Data Dump 179, 2013
Spence, Steve, Wordplay With Worldplay, Poetry Quarterly Review 13, 1999
Spence, Steve, Colour of Dust by A C Evans, Scene Magazine, 1999
Spence, Steve, Neon Highway Issue 2 October 2002, Terrible Work Online, 2003
Spence, Steve, Esophagus Writ, Tears In The Fence No 61 Winter/Spring 2015
Spindoc, Fractured Muse by A C Evans, Dragon's Breath 72, 2004
Spracklen, Jamie, A C Evans is an artist and poet, Monas Hieroglyphica 10 [, 2000
Tennant, Peter, Literary Horror Reviewed, Unhinged Online 1 , 2001
Tyrer, D-J, Old Rossum's Book of Practical Robots, Handshake 75 , 2008
Tyrer, D-J, Vespula Vanishes & Other Poems, The Supplement 38, 2008
Tyrer, D-J, This Sepulchre, The Supplement 56, 2011
Tyrer, D-J, Grave Implications, The Supplement 70, 2014
Tyrer, D-J, Esophagus Writ , The Supplement 73 , 2015
Vaughan, Vittoria, Interactive Patterns Kaleidoscopically… [Zones of Impulse], 10th Muse 6, 1995
Weston, D J, Letters to the Editor [Displacement Effects] , The Supplement 40, 2008
Wiloch, Thomas, Chimaera Obscura, Taproot Reviews 3, 1993
Wiloch, Thomas, Between Alien Worlds, Taproot Reviews 4, 1994
Wiloch, Thomas., Decaying Orbits, Stride 29, 1987
Zine Kat, Space Opera by A C Evans, Dragon's Breath 46/47, 1998
Zine Kat, Colour of Dust by A C Evans, Dragon's Breath 59, 1999
Zine Kat, Asphalt Jungle, Dragon's Breath 59 , 1999
Zine Kat, Handshake, Dragon's Breath 59 , 1999
Zine Kat, The BBR Directory, Dragon's Breath 59 , 1999
Zine Kat, Memories of the Future, Dragon's Breath 60, 1999
Zine Kat, Omega Lightning by A C Evans, Dragon's Breath 64, 1999

Illus: Op Art Study, 1969

Tuesday, 12 July 2022

Crisis Of The Object

 


Max Ernst paraphrased the classic postulate of Lautreamont as ‘the fortuitous encounter – upon a non-suitable plane – of two mutually distant realities’ (Inspiration to Order). Here, a fruit-drying machine replaces the notorious sewing machine; an analogous object (octopus) replaces the umbrella and the ‘non-suitable’ plane of the dissecting table is replaced by a desolate landscape – in the background? Maldoror. Revised from Crisis of the Object, Letter of Introduction, 1972.


Illustration: Crisis of The Object III The Ducassian Encounter, 1972

Monday, 19 October 2015

In The Soft State Zone

Meanwhile, Cornfield came upon a tattered figure, shuffling ahead of him down the hollow corridor, illuminated so vividly in the glare of the overhead strip-lights.
He slowed his pace so that he was following this curious old woman who, though stooped with arthritis, was moving with an air of urgency. She led him to a door inlaid with panels of whorled glass, decorated with undulating metal tendrils; iron blossoms creeping across pearl grey-pink panes engraved with angelic, ethereal faces Drugged eyes, drooping lips.
               Silence.
               He listened but could hear nothing.
               Ahead and behind, just a deserted corridor with gleaming white tiles and veined, marble pillars.
               Knowing the old crone had gone inside he was compelled to follow and – for his audacity – was greeted by the most fascinating vision.
               He was standing high on a gallery fashioned out of iron, its balustrade extending around the perimeter of the entire room. Across the other side, exactly opposite, was another door of the same design as the one now swinging gently shut behind him.
               Between was an abyss.
               Blue air.
               Streaks and eddies of  violet light.
Trailing streamers of purple tinged with black. In the centre a shaft, rising to the empyrean, falling to infinite depths.
This was the Soft State Zone.
               Soundlessly, gracefully, continuously, slabs of golden metal drifted past, sailing upwards with a turning motion, slowed down images of jet aircraft at high altitude, where all sense of speed and direction has been eliminated in favour of a feeling of weightless progression. Busy machines scuttled across on wires that led nowhere. Boxes, bristling with metal arms and tubes, latticed with ostensibly decorative holes in arabesque patterns, floated static for a second or two before dropping away into some abyssal realm beyond all perception.
               Neon lights flickered. Black holes in the fabric of the almost tactile atmosphere opened and closed with obscene noises. Wires and electrodes gleamed in the suffused light.
               Cornfield noticed a vague, female figure suspended in space. It was slowly revolving, feet together, arms outstretched, fingers hooked convulsively, head thrown back in ecstasy or pain. Whole metal plates encased her limbs like sculpted armour. Cylindrical objects revolved in a circle about her. Above her head billowed a black thunder cloud where lightning flickered with subdued ferocity. White plates the colour of asbestos floated on the surface of this cloud and letters of the Greek alphabet appeared and disappeared on their surfaces in random patterns.
To the left of the cloud, above the radiant face of the female entity, was suspended a curious contraption. Its main component was a square cuboid apparatus with a curved horn-like feature projecting from one of its corners. Clipped to its side was a complex of pipes and wires from which was suspended a tube with a bulbous swelling at one end supporting a metal plate. A cluster of delicate, pronged instruments reminiscent of dental equipment was in contact with the figure, constantly probing, tapping and massaging the figure’s back with wide sweeps as she floated this way and that, suspended in viscous luminosity.
               Below the figure and to its right three shapes glowed silver. The first was a diagrammatic representation of an exploding star, a sort of giant asterisk. The second took the form of three concentric rings. The third consisted of twelve oblong blocks of silver laid together in such a way that their inner edges formed a circle.
 Lights flashed on and off beneath the glass floor as, suddenly, a brilliant flare lit up seven gold cones, luminous forms materialising for an instant before vanishing amid drifting rainbows.
               His attention was again drawn to the suspended figure. He noted the wide open eyes and fine black wires trailing from her russet coloured nipples, so swollen and inviting, twin crowns for her hypertrophic breasts. He saw, blossoming in the air below her feet, three grinding cylinders surmounted by an inverted crucifix drifting among sonographic echoes of extinct birdcalls, among a galaxy of component parts arranged in six zones. There were ascending, coiling Soft State paths of black and silver.
               Gripped by vertigo Cornfield clung to the rails of the balustrade. The whole area seemed to tilt and roll like the deck of a ship caught in a storm. The central figure opened and closed her legs thrusting her body in a contortion, moving her arms in slow circles – a blind swimmer in an acid bath. The near zone was drenched in a sticky, oozing cloud of white, milky light that dripped over the quietly whirring machinery, sending impulse needles spinning behind glass plates.
               A cage materialised. A vicious portcullis above her head which descended around her body, moulding itself to her throbbing, armoured, plastic flesh. There was a spasm of mechanistic carnality and a spurt of crimson was ejected into the shimmering haze.

               As Cornfield turned to leave the centre of this vast hollow space became brilliant white, glowing with the intensity of lava in the bowels of a volcano or metal in a furnace. Bolts of red shivered across the scene illuminating the inferno in a hellish glare. He heard a long, breathless sigh, an eerie sound on a descending chromatic scale of soft, warmly textured notes, melting into cascades of snowflakes, congealing into the faces of Netherlandish angels – wide eyes, cheeks formed from the wings of hummingbirds – blue, turquoise, violet – all the colours of unattainable dreams.

A FRAGMENT from ‘DEBRIS’, 1970

Illus: Bridal Viscosity, 1972 


Wednesday, 25 December 2013

Space Opera An Interview With A C Evans

Space Opera, eight linked poems employing Science Fiction imagery, contains willed ironies reflective of the element of ambiguity so inherent to the works of the writer concerned, ‘hermetic artist’ A. C. Evans.
Neogaea – New Earth – as a term summons up hopeful visions by association, while Space Opera calls upon the reader to expect epic, even glorious, space adventure. Yet, in fact, the sections cumulatively ‘tell a story’, insofar as clear and sequential narrative can be drawn from the image data projected by these pieces (even the use of the word ‘poem’ is rendered ambiguous by Evans’ own preference for the term ‘texts’) not of hope or wonder but of flawed personnel with fractured motivation bedeviled by fragmented data and encountering, finally, only failure of ‘a great attempt’.
This ‘great attempt’ – to explore the massive outer space planet Neogaea and its alien-inhabited satellite Neon, where strange non-human ‘cathedrals’ dominate a bizarre landscape (which is told in the Space Opera itself, and also affects a prior but unrelated Evans piece, ‘Contact Zero’), relates to many illustrations, and continues as an ‘undertow’ or concealed reference point in some of his more recent work – should have been a notable landmark in the development of speculative poetry in Britain.
That this was not so is a function, I suspect, partly of the difficulty of the work, a density of form, and demands on reader concentration more familiar in the ‘cutting edge’ areas of American speculative poetry of the time. It is also, perhaps, a result of the actual place of publication. The sequence appeared not in a genre outlet (though, as an aside, attempts by other writers at experimental work in UK genre outlets at about the same time also met little response), but in a more ‘mainstream’ group of publications, namely issues of Rupert Loydell’s little magazine Stride and related booklets from the same editor’s press: Stride Publications.
As the passage of time gives the perspective to appreciate more easily the importance of the achievement represented by Space Opera, and as a growing number of genre readers develop a capacity to attempt the appreciation of work which combines SF iconography with experiments in communicative form, therefore there is a value in returning to the sequence.
In an interview with Stride’s editor in Spring 1985, published in Stride 20, A. C. Evans gave considerable insight into his sources, inspirations, and methodology; but this interview had concentrated heavily on his artwork, rather than his poetry, and at no point in time overtly touched on the use of Science Fiction or speculative themes and imagery. I felt an interview directed to clarifying these areas would be of value, particularly in terms of contexting the powerful Space Opera sequence.

I began by asking about the use by the writer of the term ‘texts’ for this and other written work.

A. C. Evans: I use the term to distance myself from traditional verse writing. I actually prefer the phrase ‘poems and/or texts’ – so referring to the material as ‘prose-poems’ or just ‘poems’ is not a problem at all.
A related group of questions followed, aiming to elicit the roots of Evans’ use of Science Fiction material, and its meaning to his writing.

Steve Sneyd: How do you see your work in relation to Speculative poetry as a whole – do you see a connection? Are you influenced by others, and if so, who?

A.C. Evans: Regrettably, I am not in touch with Speculative, or Science Fiction, poetry in the UK (although I guess I should be!), so I can’t identify any influences in this context. My only formal connection with the Speculative scene was the appearance of a couple of drawings in the American magazine Velocities (1983), which is definitely “a magazine of speculative poetry”. Influences do surface of course, but they are external to current small press SF. Quite a complex area this, but if asked I would cite J. G. Ballard and Olaf Stapledon (crucial). American influences would be William Burroughs (inescapable) and H.P. Lovecraft, and possibly Harlan Ellison. But the SF influence generally is non-specific, culled from mass media SF and SF/Fantasy art, etc. etc.

Are you someone who has come to these forms/topics via an interest in Science Fiction?

Science Fiction has always been part of the cultural landscape (for me), so SF topics were a natural element in the ‘symbolic repertoire’. I have no real intention of being an SF writer – SF is just a component of the mass media environment we inhabit. I’m using SF as raw material, in fact, so I’m not really working from within the genre – this accentuates the alienation-distancing effect I hope to project. The details of the SF scenario I use probably derive from the mass media SF I mentioned: Dr. Who, Star Trek, or 1960s TV plays such as Collin Kapp’s ‘Lambda 1’; also the films of Andrei Tarkovsky – Solaris and Stalker, and the use of SF in David Bowie’s music (‘Space Oddity’, Ziggy Stardust, Aladdin Sane and Diamond Dogs) which gave a new slant to things circa 1972.
The use I make of SF material? I use the idea of endless voyages through multi-dimensional space(s) as some kind of metaphor for an underlying theme of voidness (that is, ideas of outer limits, alienation, non-communication, and angst). SF-type ideas fit in with this – or seem to. After all, where are the (scientific) outer limits? High Energy Physics and Cosmology enter in – so some of this comes out like SF, but actually derived from Cosmology – e.g. Black Hole Singularities. This endless voyage thing is archetypal: look at Jung and Coleridge.
It also overlaps with a ‘symbolic repertoire’ of ‘occult themes’, such as the astral plane. I should also note a continuity with other more traditional sources, particularly Apocalyptic/Millenarian visionary materials – hence angels and cathedrals all mixed up with Starfleet Command in Space Opera.

Do you see yourself as part of the SF/Speculative poetry world?

As I said, I’m not ‘in touch’ enough to be part of the Speculative scene – but having said that, I’m not against being classified in this way.

Your very experimental approach is almost unique in this century, certainly within this area of genre poetry in the 80s. What reaction have you found from editors to this kind of material?

I have only worked with a small number of editors who’ve been very supportive – particularly the editors of Stride and Memes. My feeling is that the material we are discussing runs counter to the anecdotal/humanistic mould of most small press straight ‘poetry-verse’, so one regards blank reactions as understandable, given the overtly hermetic and inaccessible style of the pieces themselves. Getting down to the cutting edge inevitably means getting into an area where rational communication starts to break down, and I expect editors not to relate to this sort of thing – although I haven’t submitted poems to pure SF editors, ever, so have no idea how they would react.

Was the Space Opera sequence conceived as a whole?

Yes, although ‘Neogaea’ (Space Opera 5) was actually written first, in 1984. The other parts were derived from it some months later. ‘Space Opera (The First Report)’ was published in Stride 21. I think ‘Gaze Of The Medusa’ was especially written for The Serendipity Caper anthology, as a sort of introduction to the sequence.

Does any other work relate to the sequence?

It was linked to ‘Contact Zero’, which also appeared in The Serendipity Caper, and initially in Stride 19. The Space Opera texts also stimulated a number of drawings such as ‘Centre Of Gravity’ from 1984; and ‘Life On Neogaea’, ‘Angel With Raiding Party’, ‘Styx Insect’, ‘The NeoNova’, ‘Destination Tomorrow’, and others, from 1985.

Have you written other Science Fiction texts?

There are SF-type poems in both of my Stride booklets (Exosphere and Decaying Orbits) – such as ‘Metacropolis’ – which are not part of the Neogaea complex.

Finally, could you explain what you were trying to achieve with the Space Opera sequence, the extent to which you think you achieved your aims, and, perhaps, a few words on how it the sequence relates to your body of work as a whole?

It’s easier to answer the last part of the question first. Space Opera fits into a range of discursive prose texts subverted by surreal and aleatoric elements. The Xantras (1992) is a more recent example. It was an attempt to see how ‘far out’ (or in) you can get without being too abstract (I don’t really believe in pure abstraction) or too conceptual. Also, as we’ve said, the sequence relates to graphics like Contact Zero (not in this volume) and a number of line drawings (some of which are in this volume): I like to think there’s a non-rational continuum in my work in all media – unexpected links connecting things in half-hidden patterns. pathways to the outer limits.


I tried to achieve a fusion of ‘genre’ thematics with an ‘experimental’ prose style in order to, as it were, get the genre aspects into another gear - it was a clash of disparate elements – a populist space opera scenario filtered through a linguistic style derived from a more refined ‘arty’ ethos. But technical, aesthetic considerations are only part of the equation. There’s an entertainment factor as well. So if the reader finds the sequence dull then I’ve failed in my objective of translating the reader into another sphere. I wouldn’t want to change or revise any of the sequence – so I guess I feel I achieved my aims. Only the readers can say if Space Opera works for them.

(c) Steve Sneyd, 1995

Sunday, 5 June 2011

Messiaen And Surrealism





















Olivier Messiaen in the Surrealist Context - Trans-Ideological Affinities

Surrealism is a term that has been used in connection with Olivier Messiaen (1908-1992) more than any other composer. While the term is often used in a lax way, simply allowing hack critics to denote a certain perceived ‘weirdness’ of tone, the relationship between the composer and the surrealist aesthetic is worthy, perhaps, of a brief exploration.
It must be said at the outset that, as a musician and composer, Messiaen did not participate in the Surrealist movement. During the inter-war era the leader of the Surrealists, Andre Breton (1896-1966), was – unlike the Zurich Dadaists – actually opposed to music in principle, excoriating composer-cliques such as Les Six as promoted in Paris high society by ‘fake poet’ Jean Cocteau. Furthermore, as ultra-humanist subversives and revolutionaries, the Surrealists’ militant, materialist, anti-clerical, anti-Catholic, anti-religious position would have rendered Messiaen persona non grata in their eyes. In the post war era the relationship between Surrealism and music changed, but primarily as a result of the rise of Bebop and the recognition of a fellow feeling with Afro-American black culture as enshrined in The Blues – the relationship between Surrealism and Western ‘classical’ art-music remains difficult and, in the main, uncharted territory.
The evolution of Messiaen’s development can be described as passing through three distinct periods and two distinct phases. Chronologically the Periods are (1) 1917-1936 (2) 1937-1949 and (3) 1949 to date. The first period is, naturally, a formative, early, ‘pioneering’ period. The second period a middle consolidation period, and the later third period, an era of ‘transmutation’, giving rise to works which extend the potentialities of the earlier periods to such a degree as to define a completely new phase of achievement without sacrificing continuity. In some respects, it seems that these three eras can be broadly divided into two distinct Phases of inner evolution. The first two, the ‘pioneering’ era and the ‘consolidation’ era, comprise works that may be defined as microcosmic and subjectivist, the last period comprises works of a more impersonal, macrocosmic mode.
To explain this analysis it is helpful to identify some salient works which also, by comparison with other works in other media, by different artists, may illustrate some overlaps between Messiaen’s music and Surrealism and the Surrealist ethos.

Early Period: 1917-1936
From the beginning Messiaen’s music derived from two modes of thought: a personal, subjectivist mode exemplified by the Preludes (1929) for solo piano, “etiolate mood-pictures still sunk in the prison of the self” to quote Malcolm Troop, and an hieratic, theological mode epitomised by the organ work Le Banquet Celeste (1926) or, even more starkly, by L’Apparition de l’Eglise Eternelle (1932). The Preludes recall and extend several works by Messiaen’s predecessor Claude Debussy (piano preludes like Voiles and La Cathedrale Engloutie (1910) or orchestral works such as Danse Sacree et Danse Profane from 1903). The label Impressionist has served to obscure the fact that Debussy was closely associated with the proto-Surrealist ethos of the fin de siecle French Symbolists, showing deep affinities with poets such as Baudelaire and Mallarme, themselves recognised as precursors of the Surrealist spirit. The piano Preludes of both composers seem like musical renditions of Redon’s lithographs. Messiaen’s 'Les Sons Impalpable du Reve' inhabits the same oneiric sphere as Redon’s pictures like the painting 'Yeux Clos' (1890) or the two lithograph series entitled Dans le Reve (1879) and Songes (1891)
The iconoclastic, Absurdism of late ultra-Symbolist Pataphysics (Alfred Jarry) and the abrasive nihilism of Dada have worked to obscure the roots of French Surrealism in the world of nineteenth century Symbolism. The Surrealists themselves always tended to emphasise their preference for the Symbolist tradition of poetic anarchism and revolt (Lautreamont, Rimbaud), rather than that of subjective, interior exploration. Despite clear parallels, the work of Odilon Redon (1840-1916) was not seen as proto-Surrealist. Nevertheless from the present historic vantage point it is obvious that there is a line of continuity from the pre-Freudian world of Symbolist painting to the post-Freudian spirit of Surrealist endeavour. This is despite the fact that the neo-conservative religiosity espoused by many Symbolists would be seen as hopelessly retrograde from the Surrealist perspective. In fact both Claude Debussy (1862-1918) and, later, Olivier Messiaen inhabited the same pre-Surrealist cultural landscape of the Symbolist fin de siecle.
Another artist of the fin de siecle whose works seem to emanate from a similar domain to that traversed by Messiaen in his first pioneering period is the Belgian Fernand Khnopff (1858-1921). Pictures such as 'I Lock My Door Upon Myself' (1891) which project an atmosphere of spiritual isolation and psychic dissociation, or the remarkable 'Geste d’Offrande' (an image of an immobile figure frozen in ritual pose) encapsulate the muted mysticism of Messiaen’s theological mode. Messiaen’s title Les Offrandes Oubliees (1930) may not be a deliberate allusion to Khnopff - but it looks as if it should be.
Other works of Messiaen in similar vein include Diptyque (1929), Nativite du Seigneur (1935), L’Ascension (1933) and the impressive, archetypal L’Apparation de L’Eglise Eternelle. The monumentality of the latter work looks forward to the glacial peaks of Et Exspecto Resurrectionem Mortuorum (1964) and, no doubt unintentionally, demonstrates non-rational elective affinities with Gaudi’s unfinished Templo de la Sagrada Familia begun in 1883. The parabolic spires and delirious, sensual detail of Gaudi’s idiosyncratic Art Nouveau Barcelona cathedral could be an architectural premonition of Messiaen’s musical style; like Messiaen, Antoni Gaudi y Cornet (1852-1926) demonstrated, in his creative work, a phenomenological affinity with Surrealism without being, in the formal sense, Surrealist. Like his Catalan compatriot Dali, Gaudi represented an aesthetic phenomenon resistant to the apparent constraints of subsequent Surrealist ideology. Also, like Messiaen, Gaudi produced works of extreme, heretical individuality at variance, in a way, with the professed orthodoxy of belief both artists attributed to themselves. It was as though Religion provided an incitement for the imagination – an operative fiction.
Le Banquet Celeste was Messiaen’s first public work, an organ piece of unresolved dissonance and subversive stasis first performed in 1928 (the year of Breton’s Nadja, Bunuel and Dali’s film Un Chien Andalou and Aragon’s Traite du Style) four years after the publication of the Premier Manifeste (1924). Had any of the Surrealist avant garde, immersed in experiments with collage, automatism, word-scrambling and the Ducassian Encounter, attended the Paris performance of this piece they might have detected, despite the wilfully archaic façade, some signs of a sensibility attuned to the auditory equivalent of Convulsive Beauty, explosive-fixed and erotic-veiled. However the differences would also have been obvious. Messiaen was clearly establishing a traditional theological basis for his work; the Surrealists were fixated upon the chance incursions of the quotidian marvellous. These were ideologically irreconcilable positions, even though Messiaen was drawn to a ‘surrealist’ use of language. In his case this stemmed from rejection of the arid neo-classical formulations practised by middle-of-the road artists of the day, rather than the Dada experiments of Tzara, Huelsenbeck and Schwitters or, in France, of Breton and Soupault (Les Champs Magnetiques, 1920).
Messiaen’s formative, pioneering period corresponds to the proto-Surrealist movements of the previous fin de siecle generation. The reason for this is the bipolar modality of Messiaen’s creative thought, the complementary desires to penetrate the inner recesses of experience and the ‘mystical’ or theological imperative. Both tropisms tended to unleash unpredictable and powerful forces, finding expression in Messiaen’s unique, violent and monumental musical sound-forms. This musical language cannot be constrained by the Catholic theological framework espoused by the composer and can, therefore, be categorised as a manifestation of sur-reality in music, despite problematic personal, historical and cultural complications.

Middle Period: 1937-1949
The evolutionary difference between the works of Messiaen’s second period and his first is a difference in ‘depth’, not in a qualitative sense, but in a progressive sense: Messiaen’s musical explorations took him ‘deeper’, as it were, into the hinterland of his chosen terrain. In some the respects the works of his second period are more extreme, or appear so. The delicate, subjective mode of the piano preludes is overtaken by a series of works that are the most overtly surrealistic of the composer’s output.
Firstly there are the Poemes Pour Mi (1936) and secondly, Chants de Terre et de Ciel (1938), two song-cycles influenced by the translucent verse of Pierre Reverdy (hailed by Andre Breton as a precursor), set to piano music which complements rather than accompanies the words. This music echoes and cascades amid the metallic membranes on an inner cosmos where landscapes metamorphose into female bodies, like Pavel Tchelitchews’ painting 'Fata Morgana' (1940). Harawi, Chant d’Amour et de Mort (the title of a third song-cycle) marks a further, distinctive evolution of sensibility. It is the first part of a trilogy, the other two parts being the Turangalila-Symphonie (1948) and Cinq Rechants (1948). In Harawi (1945) the fluidity of the imagery and the unearthly pianism of the music combine to produce one of the most sensational and ‘surreal’ works of our age. The protagonist Piroutcha, a Peruvian incarnation of Wagner’s Isolde, participates with her lover in an extraordinary ritual dance amid atoms, rainbows, giant staircases, sacred birds and exploding galaxies of onomatopoeic utterances. The whole scenario is set in a vertiginous abyss where the moment of love-death is prolonged into an infinite star-less night:

Dans le noir, colombe vert,
Dans le noir, perle limpide
Dans le noir, mon fruit de ciel…

In Rencontres Avec Olivier Messiaen (1961) by Antoine Golea the composer says that a picture by the English Surrealist Roland Penrose called 'The Invisible Isle' (1936), also known as 'Seeing is Believing', inspired the section of Harawi entitled Amour Oiseau d’Etoile. The picture depicts the blond head of a beautiful young woman suspended upside down over an island city; her neck penetrates the low-lying cloud entering into planetary space above. From the bottom of the picture, extending upwards, are two hands in a gesture of yearning. Messiaen has said that this picture encapsulates the whole of Harawi.
The incantatory language of Harawi and Cinq Rechants is perhaps the most remarkable element in Messiaen’s ‘surrealism’. On the one hand it links him with a pre-surrealist tradition of linguistic experimentation, stretching back to Edgar Allan Poe. On the other hand it shows how close he was, coincidentally or otherwise, to contemporaneous Surrealist poetics – particularly the work of Antonin Artaud (1896-1948), who was to die the year of Cinq Rechants. Although utterly apart philosophically, there is a trans-ideological affinity between Artaud and Messiaen, particularly the Messiaen of Harawi with its pre-Columbian mise en scene and cosmic-mythical scenario. There is an extremism in the work of both Artaud and Messiaen which discloses a universe of ritualistic ‘cruelty’ and depends, in part, on the creation of personalised hermetic languages based on dextrous collages of Eastern and Western elements. Artaud, in his dramaturgic researches, helped push Surrealist thought away from Western models, towards non-European themes and obsessions. This was, in some ways, an extension of the exoticism that attracted Debussy to the Balinese gamelan. Artaud saw in the stylised formalism of Balinese dance a way of rejuvenating the staid formalisms of Western theatre.
Messiaen’s linguistic usage evolved into a hybrid of French, Hindi and personal images encapsulated in names like Viviane, Ysault, Meduse and Orphee, all protagonists of Symbolist inner dramas, immortalised in paintings by, for example, Jean Delville and Gustave Moreau. Messiaen wrote glossolalia utterances such as

Ahi! O Mapa nama mapa nama lila, tchil…

or

Mayoma kalimolimo mayoma kalimolimo
t k tk t k t k…

These chants bear a strong generic resemblance to the archetypal poetic idiolect of Artaud’s semi-legendary ‘lost’ book Letura d’Eprahi Talli Tetr Fendi Photia O Fotre Indi (1934):

Calipa

Ke loc tispera

Kalispera

Enoctimi…

born in part, as was Harawi, out of a fascination for the myths and codices of Pre-Columbian America.
The trilogy is the high point of Messiaen’s para-surrealist output. It also highlights those aspects that set him apart from the Paris Surrealist Group of the inter-war period. His dissociation from politico-revolutionary concerns, the orthodox religious basis for his mysticism, his naïve association of earthly and heavenly love that is apparently at the opposite pole to Breton’s ‘mad love’ or amour fou. Messiaen’s explanations of his sublimated eroticism are most unconvincing when decked out in regressive, saccharine Catholic rhetoric.
Second period works comprise some of Messiaen’s best known pieces such as Quatuor Pour la Fin du Temps (1941), Les Corps Glorieux (1939), Visions de l’Amen (1943) and Vingt Regards sur l’Enfant Jesus (1944). In all cases the convulsive beauty of the works themselves it at odds with the manifest orthodox religious ideological ground-base underpinning the composer’s speculative thinking. It might appear that, like Gerard de Nerval and J-K. Huysmans before him, Messiaen pushed beyond the limits of conventional theology into the borderlands of the heretical and occult; the only parallel for his synaesthesia colour-theory, for instance, is to be found in the works of Russian composer Alexander Scriabin (1871-1915), an overt Theosophist. The numerological method he incorporated into his compositional technique can only be regarded as an example of occultism in music, assertions to the contrary notwithstanding. Again, there are precedents in the pre-surrealist world of the Symbolists: Baudelaire and Rimbaud’s Alchimie du Verbe. With these works Messiaen attempted to resolve the underlying dualism implicit in his creative thought. He was at the limits of charted experience, and the music, particularly the piano music, reflected this, gaining in intensity and violence on every level from the cataclysmic to the insidious.

Later Period: 1949 to date
The works that followed these during the third Period from 1949 onwards are generally monumental, concerned with the outer gulfs and vastness of space or the vertiginous escarpments of glaciers. There are few works dealing with the inner life of the subjective individual. Like Mallarme with his revolutionary poem Un Coup de Des, Messiaen ventured into The Abyss. In this phase there is, however, one key figure with who Messiaen can be compared: arch-Dadaist and Surrealist Max Ernst (1891-1976). It is intriguing that between these two crucial figures there are a number of points of rapport.
During the late 1930s Max Ernst developed a distinctive form of visionary painting using the ‘decalcomania’ technique. Ernst continued this style into the 1940s with paintings like 'Europe After The Rain '(1942) and 'The Eye of Silence' (1944). Decalcomania is strongly identified with Ernst, although its discovery is usually attributed to Oscar Dominguez. Similar colouristic effects can be found, in prototype form, in some canvases by Odilon Redon and Gustave Moreau and the technique was also used extensively by Leonor Fini (1918-1996). Many of her paintings from the 1960s seem to emanate from the same creative universe as the music Messiaen was composing during the immediate post-war period. For example works such as 'The Dormant Water' (1962), 'A Breathing Shadow' (1962), 'Sleep In a Garden '(1962), 'The Trough of Night' (1963) and 'The Long Sleep of Flowers' (1964) are almost exactly comparable to the soundscapes of Harawi and Turangalila. Decalcomania involves the use of colour figurations embedded in wet paint applied according to the laws of Objective Chance. The result is an eroded surface where decoration assumes an autonomous role, just as Messiaen exploited the effects of apoggiaturas and added notes. Ernst’s painting 'The Stolen Mirror' (1941) featured a ziggurat-dotted landscape strongly reminiscent of the mythical Peruvian setting of Harawi.
It is true that the works of Max Ernst are imbued with a corrosive black humour, blasphemy and cosmic irony quite alien to Messiaen’s conscious intentions. A typical example would be 'The AntiPope' (1942) which expresses an almost Satanic sensibility completely at odds with Messiaen’s joyful ecstasies. Yet nevertheless the static highly textured effect of the music finds a correlation here, as does the collage-like juxtaposition of ‘soundblocks’ in works like Et Exspecto Resurrectionem Mortuorum, which are intrinsically apocalyptic rather than Surrealist. Furthermore, in a series of Ernst pictures entitled, among others, 'The Nymph Echo' (1937), 'Nature at Dawn' (1938) and 'Joie de Vivre' (1936) the viewer is confronted with strangely Messiaen-esque visions: giant bird-headed creatures lurking amid luscious, fantastic blossoms and grotesque vegetation comprised of huge, leathery leaves. The vast dimensions of these alien worlds somehow prefigure the cosmic landscapes of the Catalogue d’Oiseaux (1958); crystalline evocations of magical, hyper-real bird-life; bizarre avian deities, monuments to the birds. Messiaen’s later works such as Et Exspecto, Livre d’Orgue (1951) and La Transfiguration (1969) conjure up towering auditory edifices and vast canyons of sound. Mexican step-pyramids, echoing glaciers, vaults of stained glass, forests like giant cathedrals, bird-familiars – these are all the auditory counterparts of Ernst’s ‘great forests’ and ‘entire cities’. They are the auditory equivalents of the awesome geological landscapes and boundless spatial gulfs depicted in paintings like 'Mundus est Fabula', (1959) 'A Swarm of Bees in the Palace of Justice' (1960), 'Inspired Hill' (1950), 'The Twentieth Century' (1955) and 'The Sky Marries The Earth' (1964).
A shared fascination for avian life links Max Ernst and Olivier Messiaen. Ernst created innumerable bird-monuments. His birds are stylised, linear shapes, as depicted in 'Chaste Joseph' (1928) or 'The Interior of Sight' (1929). They are counterparts, in a visual medium, to the stylisation of birdsong achieved by Olivier Messiaen in numerous musical works. For both artists these supernal birds are more than a fixation, and their simultaneous appearance in the works to two great masters of the twentieth century cannot be merely coincidental – there is a link between Messiaen and the Surrealists, but that link is non-rational. Its existence reveals a creative imperative that transcends ideological, even theological differences.

Postscript: The First Audible Diamond
After the Second World War, in 1946, Andre Breton revised his approach to the problem of music and Surrealism. Acknowledging deep connections between poetry and song he called for a ‘reunification’ of hearing to accompany the revolutionary programme of the Surrealist reunification of sight. In an article for the magazine Modern Music entitled 'Silence is Golden', reprinted in What is Surrealism? (1978), he wrote:

…for the first audible diamond to be obtained, it is evident that the fusion of the two elements - music and poetry - could only be accomplished at a very high emotional temperature. And it seems to me that it is in the expression of the passion of love that both music and poetry are most likely to reach this supreme point of incandescence.

If the most crucial feature of the Surreal marvellous is Convulsive Beauty then, even before Breton wrote these words, that unique form of beauty had already found its first, essential musical expression - in Messiaen’s Harawi of 1945 and many previous pieces composed during the heyday of the Paris Surrealist Group.

Bibliographic Addenda

The first version of this essay accompanied a Messiaen Discography compiled for a Professional Examination in October 1972. The essay was first published in the magazine BRIO (Volume 11, No 2, Autumn, 1974) with Part II of the Discography, the most comprehensive survey of Messiaen’s work then available in English. The Discography also included numerous literary references to help illuminate the provenance of Messiaen’s compositions. The following references are related exclusively to this essay and include a number of items omitted from the first version:

Artaud, Antonin. Artaud Anthology. City Lights Books. San Francisco. 1965.
Artaud, Antonin. Letter to Peter Watson. Link Magazine [Artaud Special Issue]. Spring 1969.
Breton, Andre. Manifestos of Surrealism. University of Michigan. Ann Arbor 1972.
Breton, Andre. What is Surrealism? Selected Writings. Pluto Press. London. 1978.
Ernst, Max. Beyond Painting. Wittenborn, Schultz, Inc. New York. 1948.
Golea, Antoine. Rencontres Avec Olivier Messiaen. Julliard. Paris. 1961.
Jelinski, Constantin. Leonor Fini. La Guilde du Livre et Clairefontaine. Lausanne. 1972.
Masini, Lara Vinca. Gaudi. Hamlyn. London. 1970.
Redon, Odilon. The Graphic Works of Odilon Redon. Dover Publications. New York. 1969.
Troup, Malcolm. Messiaen and the Modern Mind [Thesis]. University of York. 1967.
Troup, Malcolm. Regard sur Olivier Messiaen. Composer 37. Autumn/Winter, 1970-71

Illustration: Angel For The End Of Time, 1972

Tuesday, 26 May 2009

Dea Phantastica



Dancing with the Dead - recently published fiction by A C Evans
Then turning to my love I said,
‘The dead are dancing with the dead,
The dust is whirling with the dust.’
- Oscar Wilde

‘The Vision of Morgan Le Fay’ (1992) was published in Awen 55, December 2008. ‘We Vampires’ (1972) was published in the Halloween anthology Haunting Tales (2008). ‘Mute Witness’ (1972) was published in Monomyth Volume 8.2 Issue 44, December 2008. These are all from Atlantean Publishing (editor D-J Tyrer).
The two short stories from 1972 are from Deathmasques that early collection of thanato-erotic symbolic psychodramas; ‘The Vision of Morgan Le Fay’ exists in various versions and is also included in the collection Colour of Dust (Stride, 1999).
Morgan Le Fay is the Dea Phantastica of all our nightmares. She embodies the anarchy of the wayward imagination. This short prose poem takes the form of a telepathic communication from Morgan, goddess of Strange Doorways, to a visionary ‘scryer’, the Hermetic Philosopher of the Dead Lake (a fictionalised Dr John Dee) revealing her attributes and history to him via his crystal stone.
Beware her ‘shape-shifting gargoyles’ they are everywhere!
Illustration; Dea Phantastica, photo by AC, 1971