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Signal, International Review of Signalist Research

Avant-garde magazine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Magazine Signal with the subtitle "International Review of Signalist Research" was the periodical of Signalism, international avant-garde creative movement. The magazine was founded in 1970 in Belgrade.[1] Founder and editor-in-chief was Miroljub Todorović.

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The movement was significantly boosted by the magazine, publishing multilingual works of neo avant-garde poets, fiction writers, essayists and visual artists from Europe, North and South America, Japan and Australia.

Nine issues of Signal appeared between 1970 and 1973,[2] presenting a number of domestic and international artists, as well as printing bibliographical data about the avant-garde publications all around the world. From 1973 until 1995 magazine could not be published, mainly for financial reasons.

From 1995 to 2004 another 21 issues of Signal appeared.[3] The new release of Signal revitalized the Signalist movement and brought numerous young artists into the movement in 21st century.

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Notable international contributors

  • Marina Abramovic, sound artist, performance artist.
  • Raoul Hausmann, dadaist, the founder of Berlin Dada in 1918.
  • Augusto de Campos, one of the initiators of the concrete poetry.
  • Michele Perfetti, mail-artist, critic and theoretician of neo-avant-garde.
  • Adriano Spatola, Italian poet, editor of the experimental poetry magazine "Tam Tam".
  • Clemente Padin, visual poet and theoretician, editor of the neo-avant-garde magazine "Ovum 10" in Uruguay
  • Julien Blaine, visual poet, performer, mail and conceptual artist. The editor of the eminent neo-avant-garde magazines "Doc(k)s"
  • Sarenco, visual poet, performer, anthologist, founder and editor of the Italian neo-avant-garde magazine "Lotta Poetica"
  • Eugenio Miccini, one of the most prominent Italian visual poets and theoretician of neo-avant-garde
  • Richard Kostelanetz, visual poet, theoretician of neo-avant-garde, anthologist, editor of the "Assembling"
  • Guillermo Deisler, Chilean visual poet, critic and anthologist
  • Bob Cobbing, English concrete poet and theoretician of sound poetry
  • Eugen Gomringer, concrete poet and theoretician, one of the founders of concrete poetry
  • Pierre Garnier, concrete poet and theoretician, founder of French spatialism, the spatial poetry
  • Enzo Minarelli, main representative of the Italian "poesia visiva"—the visible poetry
  • Keiichi Nakamura, Japanese visual and mail-artist.[4]
  • Dick Higgins, visual poet and theoretician of neo-avant-garde, editor of the publishing company "Something Else Press"
  • Dmitry Bulatov, Russian visual poet, theoretician and anthologist
  • Sol LeWitt, prominent American conceptualist
  • Shozo Shimamoto, a member of the famous Japanese neo-avant-garde group "Gutai"
  • Dr. Klaus Peter Dencker, visual poet and theoretician who put together one of the cult anthologies of visual poetry "Text-Bilder"
  • Ruggero Maggi, Italian visual poet, painter and mail-artist
  • Daniel Daligand, French visual poet, mail-artist and critic
  • Willi R. Melnikov, Russian visual poet, mail-artist and performer
  • Kum-Nam Baik, South Korean mail-artist
  • On Kawara, American conceptual artist
  • Klaus Groh, neo-dadaist, the founder of the neo-dadaist center in Germany and author of numerous anthologies and collections of visual poetry, mail-art and conceptual art.
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References

Literature

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