Jackson Mac Low's poetry and prose exceeds narrow definitions of artists by movements or poets by style. His work began with and returned to timeless subjects such as children, animals, love, war, death, and God, diverging at points into rigorously imposed structures, systems, and chance operations in an effort to suppress the ego in his art. At one point, embarrassed by his depth of feeling, Mac Low confesses to being an 'existential poet,' a declaration that the title of the poem A Lack of Balance But Not Fatal contradicts with modest and generous humor. This is an important and often very moving anthology of Mac Low's thought, at the same time as it reflects the preoccupations of his generation and ranges over a wide variety of approaches to writing and art making. Thing of Beauty is a "manifesto," the term Mac Low would use to describe expressions of personal truth; and his are beautiful."—Kristine Stiles, Professor of Art History, Duke University "In this generous selection of Jackson Mac Low's work, we can see, first hand, the poet's profound understanding of the physics of language and his exuberant articulation of the sounds of words in unpredictable motions. The multiplicity of Mac Low's forms and his rejection of any hierarchy among the forms of poetry (objective and subjective, expository or nonrepresentational, lyric and epic), along with his refusal to identify poetic composition with a characteristic 'voice' of the poet and his rejection of traditional aesthetic standards of beauty, are among the chief marks of his iconoclastic genius. Mac Low's magnificent and multidimensional poems open vast expanses for the imagination to inhabit."—Charles Bernstein "This is one of the great watershed events in recent publishing history. Mac Low's reputation has exploded on the poetry scene since his death."—Hannah Higgins, author of Fluxus Experience
Poetry. Upon its original publication in 1982, FROM PEARL HARBOR DAY TO FDR'S BIRTHDAY, representing work written from the 7th of December 1981 to the 30th of January 1982, was recognized as a significant new direction in the writing of noted poet Jackson Mac Low. Although he had written disjunctive poems since the 1930's, this work evinced a new interest, aroused in part by the "Language" poets, in intentional methodology, as opposed to his chance-oriented poems, writing he continued in BLOOMSDAY (1984) and in PIECES O' SIX (published in the Sun & Moon Classics in 1992).
The first publication of the complete series of Jackson Mac Low’s “Forties” poems. Written and revised from 1990 to 2001 with a method Mac Low called “gathering,” where he took into the poems words, phrases, and other kinds of word strings, and sometimes sentences, that he saw, heard, or thought of while writing the drafts, the poems include detailed markings of caesural spacing, timing, compound words (many neologistic), and metrical stress. Each of the poems adhere to what Mac Low termed “fuzzy verse form”: 8 stanzas, each comprising 5 lines (hence "forties"): 3 moderately long lines, followed by a very long line, and then a short line.
Magazine. Book + CD. This is the 75th birthday Festschrift for Jackson Mac Low: poet, playwright, multimedia performance artist, a founding participant in Fluxus, and composer of music, performance works, and radio works. Contributions include essays, poetry, graphics, photographs, an interview and sixty minutes of music on a CD. From the introduction to CRAYON 1 by Andrew Levy: "Though it is not my intention to write an introduction on the influence of Buddhism on the work of Jackson Mac Low, I do want to suggest that the relation between his knowledge and practice of Buddhism and his masterful deployment of both nonintentional and intuitive or spontaneous methods of composition (a brilliantly various body of poetic methods several other contributors to this volume speak quite eloquently on) enables us to understand that all notions of self and civilization are culturally induced ways of keeping life at a distance, impersonal, remote, abstract, without feeling. In other words, an alchemist of linguistic matter, Mac Low's art shines a light by which ordinarily diffused states or conditions of life are brought into sharpened focus and infused with energy sufficient to liberate men and women from the largely mechanical, socially coerced, habit-ridden fragmentation of life. In its capacity to act through the abstraction, and so become increasingly immediately infused with its environment, Mac Low's works recover what has been delegitimated in Western culture since Plato—an Immediate knowledge, against the One that subsumed the apparent temporal discontinuities, the contingencies, the differences. Inside this first issue of Crayon, the reader will find poetry, personal reminiscences and tributes, essays, photos and other graphic art, an interview addressing, among other questions, Mac Low's role and participation in Fluxus, and the festchrift CD—all testament to the artist's commitment to his art and his multi-various community of fellow artists and friends." Contributors: David Abel, Ammiel Alcalay, Joe Amato, Beth Anderson, Jane Augustine, Susan Bee, Peter Behrendsen, Martine Bellen, Steve Benson, Carol Berg,, Charles Bernstein, Mei-mei Berssenbrugge, David Bromige, Sean Bronzell, Lee Ann Brown, Warren Burt, John Byrum, Louis Cabri, David Cameron, Dave Baptiste Chirot, Jack Collom, Robert Creeley, Jeff Derksen, Stacy Doris, Michael Erlhoff, Dan Farrell, Irving Feldman, Allen Fisher, Henry Flynt, Simone Forti, Allen Ginsberg, Loss Peque¤o Glazier, Michael Gottlieb, Tony Green, Barbara Guest, Sten Hanson, Bob Harrison, Bernard Heidsiek, Michael Heller, Geoffrey Hendricks, Dick Higgins, Francoise Janicot, Gerhard Jaschke, Milton Kessler, Alison Knowles, Jonathan Scott Lee, Andrew Levy, iris lezak, Clarinda Mac Low, Mordecai-Mark Mac Low, Judith Malina, Chris Mann, Peter Manson, Friederike Mayrocker, Raphael Mostel, Susan Smith Nash, Gale Nelson, Morgan O'Hara, Jena Osman, Gil Ott, Rochelle Owens, Ron Padgett, Nick Piombino, Stephen Ratcliffe, Joan Retallack, Janet Rodney, Jim Rosenberg, Jerome Rothenberg, Douglas Rothschild, Armand Schwerner, Spencer Selby, Rod Smith, Ellsworth Snyder, Anne Tardos, Tibor Tardos, Nathaniel Tarn, Henry Taylor, Richard Tuttle, Anne Waldman, Keith Waldrop, Rosmarie Waldrop, Chet Wiener, Geoffrey Young, Karl Young, Magdalena Zurawski, Nicholas Zurbrugg. On the CD: Eric Andersen, David Behrman, Jeremy Bernstein, Andrew Bolotowsky, Warren Burt, cris cheek, Andrew Culver, Alvin Curran, Moniek Darge, Roger Dean, Kenny Goldsmith, Malcolm Goldstein, Daniel Goode, Gerry Hemingway, Andrew Levy, Jackson Mac Low, Ikue Mori, Charlie Morrow, Gordon Mumma, Godfried-Willem Raes, Hazel Smith, the Splatter Trio, Jim Staley, Anne Tardos, Tui St. George Tucker, Davey Williams.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.