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Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level E , Case MP, Shelf 311

untitled

Print
1963 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Dom Sylvester Houedard was a Benedictine monk and eminent theologian, but also a pioneer, in Britain, of concrete poetry, a poetic form in which the arrangement of words and letters in a pattern on the page relates to the meaning or emotional impact of the poem. Using concrete poetry as a kind of springboard Houedard developed a way of making more purely abstract or pictorial images with the typewriter keys. He wrote that "During 1945 I realised the typewriter's control of verticals and horizontals, balancing its mechanism for release from its own imposed grid, (and) offered possibilities that suggested (I was in India at the time) the grading of Islamic calligraphy from cursive (naskhi) writing through cufic to the abstract formal arabesque, that 'wise modulation between being and not being'”.
This is one of a number of so called typestracts by Houedard in the museum’s collection. Some contain a legible arrangement of words, others are abstract, often resembling the drawings of the Russian Constructivists.


Object details

Category
Object type
Titleuntitled (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Typescript on paper
Brief description
By Dom Sylvester Houédard: typestract, untitled, 1963
Physical description
image composed of an oblong and right-angle using black typewriter ribbon with the 'm' key of a typewriter, and with small, irregular patches of 'm's.
Dimensions
  • Height: 12.5cm
  • Width: 20.3cm
Marks and inscriptions
dsh 01 11 63 (the artist's initials and date of work in typescript, vertically, down left side.)
Credit line
Acquired from Lisson Gallery, London in 1970.
Subject depicted
Summary
Dom Sylvester Houedard was a Benedictine monk and eminent theologian, but also a pioneer, in Britain, of concrete poetry, a poetic form in which the arrangement of words and letters in a pattern on the page relates to the meaning or emotional impact of the poem. Using concrete poetry as a kind of springboard Houedard developed a way of making more purely abstract or pictorial images with the typewriter keys. He wrote that "During 1945 I realised the typewriter's control of verticals and horizontals, balancing its mechanism for release from its own imposed grid, (and) offered possibilities that suggested (I was in India at the time) the grading of Islamic calligraphy from cursive (naskhi) writing through cufic to the abstract formal arabesque, that 'wise modulation between being and not being'”.
This is one of a number of so called typestracts by Houedard in the museum’s collection. Some contain a legible arrangement of words, others are abstract, often resembling the drawings of the Russian Constructivists.
Bibliographic reference
Taken from Departmental Circulation Register 1970
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.124-1970

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Record createdMay 9, 2008
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