Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 Resituating O'Hara
- 2 The Hyperscape and Hypergrace: The City and The Body
- 3 In Memory of Metaphor: Metonymic Webs and the Deconstruction of Genre
- 4 The Gay New Yorker: The Morphing Sexuality
- 5 The Poem as Talkscape: Conversation, Gossip, Performativity, Improvisation
- 6 Why I Am Not a Painter: Visual Art, Semiotic Exchange, Collaboration
- Coda: Moving the Landscapes
- Appendix: More Collaboration
- Select Bibliography
- index
6 - Why I Am Not a Painter: Visual Art, Semiotic Exchange, Collaboration
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 Resituating O'Hara
- 2 The Hyperscape and Hypergrace: The City and The Body
- 3 In Memory of Metaphor: Metonymic Webs and the Deconstruction of Genre
- 4 The Gay New Yorker: The Morphing Sexuality
- 5 The Poem as Talkscape: Conversation, Gossip, Performativity, Improvisation
- 6 Why I Am Not a Painter: Visual Art, Semiotic Exchange, Collaboration
- Coda: Moving the Landscapes
- Appendix: More Collaboration
- Select Bibliography
- index
Summary
You are worried that you don't write?
Don't be. It's the tribute of the air that
your paintings don't just let go
of you.And what poet ever sat down
in front of a Titian, pulled out
his versifying tablet and began
to drone? Don't complain, my dear.
You do what I can only name.
(‘To Larry Rivers’; O'Hara 1977b, p. 140)‘The City Summers of Hartigan and O'Hara’ would be an ideal thesis for some graduate student at Millstone University, I should think. About 1980. (O'Hara, letter to Grace Hartigan; O'Hara 1951b)
So far the concept of the hyperscape has been mainly restricted to the verbal landscape (whether spoken or written), but here I want to expand it to embrace visual media. That is, I want to move from the concept of hypertext to hypermedia, for the hyperscape is both visual and verbal and involves the hybridization of forms which is characteristic of postmodernism. In this chapter I will be arguing that in O'Hara's hyperscapes text and image, poetry and painting, and representation and abstraction do not simply coexist but also cross over or ‘cross-dress’. This, like O'Hara's adoption of the talk mode in Chapter 5, enormously extends the possibilities of what poetry can do. It also points the way towards contemporary multimedia work in which the visual is more predominant, and the visual and verbal are increasingly interdependent.
This cross-dressing of text and image in O'Hara's work is part of alternative tradition in American poetry in which verbal and non-verbal semiotic systems become intertwined in a non-hierarchical relationship. The modernist precursors were the Dadaists, Surrealists and Futurists: the work of Hugo Ball, Kurt Schwitters, Filippo Tommasso Marinetti, Tristan Tzara and others frequently straddled the visual, verbal and sonic, and also included numerous collaborations between musicians, painters and poets. Such movements re-emerged in the 1960s and 1970s internationally in visual and sound poetry. But the impact of the visual arts on O'Hara's poems is distinct from the concrete poetry of Dick Higgins, Emmett Williams (USA), Ian Hamilton Finlay (Scotland) and Dom Sylvester Houédard (England), where the word becomes an iconic sign in which form and meaning become fused. The relationship of verbal to visual in O'Hara's poetry is more like that in the work of Gertrude Stein, some of whose technical procedures run parallel to those of cubist painting.
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- Information
- Hyperscapes in the Poetry of Frank O’HaraDifference, Homosexuality, Topography, pp. 166 - 194Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2000