
The phrase “foam to form” appears in two video poems in this program, both made in 2020 – one generated by eight University of Washington Bothell students, and the other by an Austrian artist. Incidentally, both creative teams were working in response to “Lethe,” a poem by Botswana-based writer Tjawangwa Dema. This synchronicity, as well as the very different outcomes of the two pieces, exemplifies the theme of this screening: something taking shape out of frothing emotions, divine conception, nascent nostalgia, or organic material. Every piece you’ll see is an excellent example of formal exploration in video poetry.
This short animated film explores the relationship between visual and spoken worlds, when they unite, or when they take separate ways. Words become rivers, water is their letters.
- Year2020
- Runtime1 minutes
- LanguageEnglish, with no subtitles or captions
- CountryAustria
- PremiereUS Premiere
- NotePoet: Tjawangwa Dema
- DirectorNikolaus Jantsch
The phrase “foam to form” appears in two video poems in this program, both made in 2020 – one generated by eight University of Washington Bothell students, and the other by an Austrian artist. Incidentally, both creative teams were working in response to “Lethe,” a poem by Botswana-based writer Tjawangwa Dema. This synchronicity, as well as the very different outcomes of the two pieces, exemplifies the theme of this screening: something taking shape out of frothing emotions, divine conception, nascent nostalgia, or organic material. Every piece you’ll see is an excellent example of formal exploration in video poetry.
This short animated film explores the relationship between visual and spoken worlds, when they unite, or when they take separate ways. Words become rivers, water is their letters.
- Year2020
- Runtime1 minutes
- LanguageEnglish, with no subtitles or captions
- CountryAustria
- PremiereUS Premiere
- NotePoet: Tjawangwa Dema
- DirectorNikolaus Jantsch