'Text|Page|Art explores various ways to engage page space with images, sound and text. There is a particular focus on the book as art. You, the reader, also have the chance to download and print a variety of zines, and to create your own. Edited by Caren Florance.' (Publication summary)
Only literary material within AustLit's scope individually indexed. Other material in this issue includes:
World Book Night United Artists by Sarah Bodman
Every Book its Reader : Quarantine Public Library by Katie Garth and Tracy Hon
Run as Fast as You Can by Nicci Haynes
Prevarication Or, The General Drift of the 2020s by Marian Crawford
92 Days of Winter by Rees Quilford
Two Hundred and Forty-Three Postcards in Real Colour : Postcards for Perec by Linda Par
Enclosed by K. Roberts
Social Textiles : Poetry as Protest in the Anthropocene by Astra Papachristodoulou
Declaration by Peter Robinson (poetry), Andrew McDonald (artwork), Peter Swaab (writing)
On Viewing Words by Ella Morrison
Two Poems by CE Wallace
'This issue’s callout asked for explorations and interactions of page and art in a digital format, and used a quote from Australian poet and art critic Gary Catalano (1947–2002):
If the fact that many visual artists now make books can be taken as a sign that the visual arts are becoming more literary in their forms, and, perhaps, in their aspirations, then the converse could also be said of much advanced and ambitious literature in the past twenty years. Just as visual artists have added words and discursive texts to their repertory of forms, so many writers have come to use visual devices as an essential element of their work. (1983).' (Introduction)
(Introduction)
(Publication abstract)
'This issue’s callout asked for explorations and interactions of page and art in a digital format, and used a quote from Australian poet and art critic Gary Catalano (1947–2002):
If the fact that many visual artists now make books can be taken as a sign that the visual arts are becoming more literary in their forms, and, perhaps, in their aspirations, then the converse could also be said of much advanced and ambitious literature in the past twenty years. Just as visual artists have added words and discursive texts to their repertory of forms, so many writers have come to use visual devices as an essential element of their work. (1983).' (Introduction)
'This issue’s callout asked for explorations and interactions of page and art in a digital format, and used a quote from Australian poet and art critic Gary Catalano (1947–2002):
If the fact that many visual artists now make books can be taken as a sign that the visual arts are becoming more literary in their forms, and, perhaps, in their aspirations, then the converse could also be said of much advanced and ambitious literature in the past twenty years. Just as visual artists have added words and discursive texts to their repertory of forms, so many writers have come to use visual devices as an essential element of their work. (1983).' (Introduction)