[spectre] THE BOOK OF OPIUM, the last book by Caterina Davinio
ART ELECTRONICS
clprezi at tin.it
Thu Jun 28 18:24:57 CEST 2012
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Title: IL LIBRO DELL'OPPIO (THE BOOK
OF OPIUM)
Author: CATERINA DAVINIO
Publisher: Puntoacapo, Novi Ligure
(I)
Year: 2012 Genre: Italian Poetry 168 pages - Price: 16 Euro
Purchase: * Orders from the publisher: acquisti at puntoacapo-editrice.com
* Free copies: journalists, critics, cultural centers and libraries
that can make the book available to public consultation, can request a
free copy by writing to the cultural association ART ELECTRONICS:
clprezi at tin.it (please, write your address, the name of your
journal/review and web site address)
Il libro dell'oppio (The Book of
Opium), namely: the cursed years of a protagonist of the international
electronic art and poetry.
Opium and opiates, literary vice par
excellence - with a history and personalities in the literary scene,
from Baudelaire to De Quincey, from Coleridge to Burroughs - find in
this work a space unencumbered by victimism or prejudice, with a
delirious perspective, but free from censorship and taboos.
The author
writes in the introductory note: "These are sick (and hellish) paradis
artificiels... It is better not to talk about certain diseases of body
and soul, it is better to conceal them, not to upset
the sensibility
of those who, in the world, can so surely separate good and evil,
health and affliction, heaven and hell. In fact, this book remained
unpublished, and I would say secret, for more than twenty years".
We
can define The Book of Opium a work by a young poet: it contains, in
fact, lyrics created by Davinio when she was from seventeen to thirty
years old.
Mauro Ferrari points out in the afterword: "This is poetry
which brings together in one bundle a life experience which is anyway
full and painfully joyous - I too suggest an oxymoron - that in Italy
this poetry has very few equals, and that it takes refuge neither in a
more or less cursed attitude, nor in moralism. [...] The poetry of
Caterina Davinio drips vitality, corporeality and physicality, which, I
think, makes us love life beyond measure, because it sinks its nails
into abjection, into hazard and death - into a challenge to death,
even, without rhetoric, neither in the construction of the verses nor
in the narrative dimension of this lucid and hallucinated diary. […]
History? Yes, the dates (between 1975 and 1990) tell us about the years
of terrorism and heroin; but the single texts, however, tell us a story
- rather they offer to us fragmented instants, a heap of broken images,
that do not aspire to total organicity - where the pursuit of pleasure
(momentary and fleeting, as always pleasure is, according to the poet
Leopardi) merges with the immersion in pain like systole and diastole.
The desperate search for drugs is wandering, delay and waiting ("the
waiting is everything"); the resurrection to life after a night of
drugs, or the lucidity that shines between two chasms, is then the
terrible confirmation of the value of "that life which is missing",
confirmation of how life should be wooed, to feel alive one more day,
drunk on the edge of the abyss."
Caterina Davinio, writer, poet and
artist, is known for her work in new media, which has brought her,
since 1990, in contact with the international avant-garde circuits, in
publications, festivals, eexhibitions and meetings of global
sigificance, such as the Venice Biennial, the Biennale of Sydney, of
Lyon, of Liverpool, of Athens, of Merida, E-Poetry festival (Barcelona
and Buffalo, NY), Manifesta and many others, with over three hundred
appearances in meaningful exhibition contexts. This book gives us an
opportunity to know a dark period preceding 1990, in the Seventies and
the Eighties, offering a gallery of situations, characters and
atmosphere from the world of drug addiction, with moments of hedonism,
nihilism, but also playful, or dramatic, such as in "Overdose",
"Anorexia", "Flash (Poem of Heroin)".
"The Book of Opium" presents one
hundred and fourteen selected poems from the collection "Fatti
deprecabili" (Deplorable Facts), almost entirely unpublished, which
contains texts written from Davinio's early adolescence. Davinio began
writing poetry at the age of fourteen years, composing, from 1971 until
1997, over four hundred poems and performance texts; some of them were
included in anthologies, readings and theater performances in the late
Eighties and Nineties. The poems included in this book, never printed
or presented before, are a first attempt to organize and arrange part
of those manuscripts for publication.
The themes of drugs and
marginality are not new in Davinio's literary production, already
present in her novel Color Color, in various poems, and in her book
Serial Phenomenologies (2010).
The Book of Opium, with its language
directed, up from its origins, to experimentation, with a vocation for
breaking the syntactical structures, the verses, and, sometime, the
words, with the
unpredictability of some unexpected passages and
variations, provides, in a not merely neo-realistic way, an
unprecedented insight into life and the youth culture of the Seventies
and the Eighties, perhaps the generation most affected by what has been
called the drug culture.
***
Born in Foggia in 1957, Caterina Davinio
grew up in Rome, where, after a degree in Italian Literature at
Sapienza University, she dealt with contemporary art and new media, as
a writer, as a curator and a theorist. Featured in international
anthologies and journals, she has published the poetry collection
Serial Phenomenologies, Campanotto, 2010, special mention in Nabokov
Prize 2011 and in Lorenzo Montano Prize 2012, with parallel English
text, afterword by Francesco Muzzioli and a critical note by David W.
Seaman; the novel Color Color, 1998; the essays: Techno-Poetry and
Virtual Realities, 2002, with preface by Eugenio Miccini, and Virtual
Mercury House. Planetary & Interplanetary Events, book with dvd, 2012,
about net-poetry. She gained recognitions as a finalist in the awards:
Lorenzo Montano, Franco Fortini, 2011, Scriveredonna 2010 (Pescara),
for unpublished poetry. Among the pioneers of digital poetry and art in
1990, she has exhibited in more than three hundred expos in many
countries of Europe, Asia, America, Australia. Since 1997 she
participated and has created poetry and multimedia art events in seven
editions of the Venice Biennale and
collateral
events.
On the cover: Caterina Davinio, digital elaboration from a
photographic self-portrait created in 1979.
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