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Toetics

Documentracings

Documentracing is a means to make poetry without a "need" for inspiration. This approach to art unfolded during Tom’s early studies of semiotics in the 1970s, which helped Tom understand the mediating principles of the mind that constantly operate within a human being. It sparked for Tom an interest to extract “parts” from an object or environment he was experiencing such as reading a magazine, watching TV, or taking a walk. While thus engaged in the activity parts were observed, like points in time, and then extracted (traced!) as single units. These traces were always extracted according to a predetermined set of rules. In other words,  Documentracing became an approach to the making of poetry by virtue of created structures and systems. 

TOETICS published three books of documentracings.

1) Documentracings Printed Matter: This booklet shares documentracings using various publications. Each publication (magazine,  spontaneously approached within the constraints of an applied system to determine action. There were no predetermined themes, and all pages were “read” from front to back with covers always included. Single “units” (a single symbol or a group of related symbols) were usually selected from each page and traced or cut out, always maintaining their original spatial position.

2) TV Documentracings: This booklet contains drawings that documentraced television programs using a sheet of tracing paper that was placed on the television screen. Visual elements were traced with lines. In some situations, words were captured and written down via listening. In some drawings parts were combined using various rules. For example: capture a visual part with line but ending the line when the image moved or disappeared; add to a line tracing words or sounds captured by listening to program and written where the line ended.

3) Son of Fury is an original bookwork that sequences sixteen verbivisual drawings derived from the original two-hour movie by the same name (Son of Fury: The Story of Benjamin Blake, 1942, directed by John Cromwell, starring Tyrone Power and Gene Tierney) using documentrace to create it. The number of TV sponsors (16) for the movie determined the number of pages. Each TV commercial was verbally recorded as fragments of texts due to delay in writing down the words; then each text was placed in the center of the screen for words serving as originating points to draw lines from; the number of lines selected were limited to the movie segment that followed (until the next commercial interruption); then words or sounds were selected from the sequence of the movie with each selection placed at the end of each line. A limited edition of 300 numbered copies; 34 pages, 21 x 16.5 cm, printed offset.