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Ruth and Marvin Sackner share their love of
words and images with an intimate tour of their Miami Beach home/museum --
the largest private collection of its kind. Over sixty-thousand objects from
around the word speak volumes about a compulsive and joyful life of
collecting art, poetry, and artist books.

starring
Ruth & Marvin Sackner
with
Tom Phillips
Johanna Drucker
Albert DuPont
producer/director
Sara Sackner
executive producer
Andrew Behar
director of photography
Hamid Shams
editors
Andrew Behar & Sara Sackner
with music by
Terry Riley
Arnold Dreyblatt
(check out
Cantaloupe Music)
piano played by
Christopher Nava

http://www.rediscov.com/sacknerarchives
Ruth and
Marvin
Sackner
founded the Archive in
Miami Beach,
Florida in 1979. Its initial
mission was to establish a collection of books, critical texts, periodicals,
ephemera, prints, drawings, collages, paintings, sculptures, objects,
manuscripts, and correspondence dealing with precedent and contemporary,
internationally produced, concrete and visual poetry. The antecedent
material had at its starting point,
Stephane
Mallarme
’s poem, “Un Coup de Des” (Cosmopolis, 1897). The historic examples included
works with concrete/visual poetic sensibilities from such twentieth century
art movements as Italian Futurism, Russian and Eastern European Avant Garde,
Dada, Surrealism, Bauhaus, De Stijl, Ultra, Tabu-Dada, Lettrisme, and Ultra-Lettrisme.
The initiators of the contemporary,
international, concrete poetic movement included
Oyvind
Fahlstrom (1953),
Eugen
Gomringer (1953) and the Noigandres Group, i.e.,
Augusto De Campos, Haroldo De Campos, and Decio Pignatari (1955). The
Sackners collected their works as well as those of subsequent poets and over
the years expanded the scope of the Archive to include unique or small
edition artist’s books that integrated text and image or consisted of
experimental typography. They added examples of typewriter art and poetry,
experimental calligraphy, correspondence art, stamp art, sound poetry,
performance poetry, micrography, assembling periodicals, ‘zines,’ and
graphic design as well as conventional poetry and prose written by
concrete/visual poets and artists in the collection. Further, they collected
experimental typographic, text and image works from such contemporary art
movements as Fluxus, Transfuturism, and Inism. They included experimental
fictional and non-fictional books with uniquely designed layouts such as
Raymond Federman’s “Double or Nothing,” Alasdair Gray’s “1982 Janine,” B.E.
Johnson’s “House Mother Normal: A Geriatric Comedy,” Avital Ronell's "The
Telephone Book," and Mark Z. Danielewski’s “House of Leaves.” Pre-twentieth
century examples of pattern poetry were added to the Archive such as
Rabanus
Maurus’ “Liber de Laudibus Sanctae Crucis”
(1503) and
Publili
Optatiani
Porfyrii’s “
Panegyricus
Dictus
Constantino
Augusto
” (1595). The Sackners collected manuscripts, sketchbooks and letters
written by poets and artists including Ian Hamilton Finlay,
Bob
Cobbing, Dom Sylvester Houedard Tom Phillips,
William
Jay
Smith,
Jean-Francois
Bory,
Jake
Berry, and
F.A.
Nettelbeck
among others. The Archive evolved into a word/image poetic and artistic
resource rather than a restricted collection of concrete and visual poetry.
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