M
O B I U S T E X T
Winter 1992, Kansas City Public Library, Kansas City, MO
M O B I U S T E X T
2 descriptions:
The Public Library is a place for answers. We go there in search of certain
truths. In this fixed course of action one might forget the entity, the whole
system of concentrated information, desire, and genius that is the Public
Library. In this collection of hard logic lies a time machine, where future
knowledge is researched on past histories in a timeless atmosphere. This research
and the writing that follows is an attempt to order and quantify dreams and
abstract concepts. This is when language becomes our foothold in reality,
giving voice to all our notions about the universe in which we live. The advantage
of language is that it can be abstracted, stripped of logic, and still be
recognized in a given cultural context.
The Mobius Text is a perishable occasion, an ephemeral conduit in which that abstraction can flow evenly. By acting as translator/scribes the typists on the Mobius strip are conductors of an electron flow which gains its charge from participant observers (people in the library for there own reasons to begin with) reading aloud to the typists for a brief time from texts they have chosen out of the collection. These brief interactions are recorded not word for word, but at the speed of a manual typewriter physically punching each letter onto cotton--an artifact. For five to eight hours this exchange continues with many different readers and texts until the Mobius strip (40-60-ft unlcoped) is full of the day's history and poetry of the Public Library.
Alexi
Morrissey
Newark, DE
2 Novermber 1994
____________________________
Connected by the Mobius strip, two minds commence writing together to invoke
a third, the mind of a phantom poet, the author of the Mobius Text. This third
mind scribes the contours of these "momentary deities" these bits
of chanced-upon verse onto the cloth surface of the slowly turning Mobius
strip. The two writer/typists, conjoined at the head and immersed in the hard
copy data banks of the Public Library, start fresh in the morning, creating
a text that serves witness to the poetry embedded in the immense history of
written words. At the end of the day, the Mobius Text is cut from the text
machines and serves as an improvised thought made visible.
For three hours, four hours, five hours, six hours, or more, the Mobius strip
turns, receiving the newly forming poetry and recombinant histories generated
in the third mind. The two writers, conjoined by various communications technologies,
process the sounded words provided by participants into the two-chambered
intellect of the third mind, where they are then made physical onto the Moblus
strip. Within this looped zone of collaboration, both writers and participant/observers
share in a fortuitous succession of word sparks, improvised thoughts, and
direct transcription. The act of composing poetry becomes an adventure through
the syntactical theatre of mistakes, through sprouting branches on the tree
of knowledge, through the alphabetized revelations that lay in wait within
the shelved print-bound histories of the Public Library.
Tony Allard
Kansas City, MO
31 October 1994
