Recordings of 200 poems by 80 poets, four telephones; original answering machine, telephone, reel-to-reel tape recorders, and microphone; printed and handwritten ephemera
Not on view
In 1968, at the dawn of a telecommunications revolution, John Giorno began delivering instant poetry through Dial-A-Poem, a free telephone hotline in New York City. Reinforcing that “much poetry is intended to be heard, not merely read,” he invited a cross-disciplinary network of peers to recite their works, which he recorded and played back using industrial-sized answering machines. The result was “a collage of other poets, which becomes a work of art in itself that changes daily.”
Giorno’s vision for a shared, open-access repository of information was groundbreaking in a pre-digital world. Dial-A-Poem was first presented at MoMA in the 1970 exhibition Information. Galvanized by social movements, including opposition to the Vietnam War, Giorno incorporated numerous works by radical poets and political activists. This phones feature 200 randomized poems selected by the artist in 2012 from his archive of thousands.
2024
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