Mom Jokes

From Plastic Tub

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A visual presentation of the poetic achievments of the Tampa School, Mom Jokes gathered together the work of Jorge Suarez, Alexandre Dacusse and Simone Kepler, vaporically presented dutifully by Steven Adkins, Tim Wilson and Giancarlo Rendina. The material presented consisted largely of scraps, intermittent messaging, poetical asides and elaborate scrapbook entries dating from the early 1990's and covering the period of activity known to scholars as The Second Advance.

We Have Shorn The Wearing Of This

"Witnesses fainted -- eyes were reported to lolligag, arms rested, each glazzy eye made the rounds.", so went the polling data, preserved today in a system of matriculation -- an atrophic structure shot down from above, sockless, grabbing at hairs -- nearly impenetrable, it's visible means showing a flightless retreat to meaning and daring those, inviting those, nearly grabbing those whose thoughts frantically find answers, those outside the daring exploit perpretrated that day. And that's why Mom showed up.

A Final Count Is Made


Perhaps it is berShow held in October, 1997 at the Harbor Club in Tampa. The show consisted of framed, tiny scraps of paper onto which Associationalist poetry had been typed.

The fate of the pieces displayed is both horrifying and hilarious. Adkins' mother, perhaps in the ultimate Mom Joke, removed the glass from the frames and wrapped each piece in Saran Wrap.

Non-Canonical Text


All of the above.

Love made this big hole in my life. I tried to cartwheel -- but I somersaulted. I figured that's it right there."