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Jackson Mac Low

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American poet (1922–2004)

Jackson Mac Low
Mac Low, photographed byGloria Graham during the video taping of Add-Verse, 2003
DiedDecember 8, 2004(2004-12-08) (aged 81–82)
EducationUniversity of Chicago;Brooklyn College
OccupationsPoet, performance artist, composer, and playwright
Spouse(s)

Jackson Mac Low (September 12, 1922 – December 8, 2004)[1] was an American poet,performance artist,composer andplaywright, known to most readers of poetry as a practitioner of systematic chance operations and other non-intentional compositional methods in his work, which Mac Low first experienced in the musical work ofJohn Cage,Earle Brown, andChristian Wolff. He was married to the artist Iris Lezak from 1962 to 1978, and to the poetAnne Tardos from 1990 until his death.

An early affiliate ofFluxus[2] (he co-publishedAn Anthology of Chance Operations) and stylistic progenitor[3] of theLanguage poets, Mac Low cultivated ties with an eclectic array of notable figures in the postwar Americanavant-garde, includingNam June Paik,Kathy Acker,Allen Ginsberg, andArthur Russell.[4] His work has been published in more than 90 anthologies and periodicals and he had readings, exhibits, performances, lectures, and broadcasts in North and South America, Europe, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand.[5]

Life

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Mac Low received hisassociate's degree from theUniversity of Chicago in 1941—where he continued to take graduate courses in philosophy and literature into 1943—and hisbachelor's degree inancient Greek from the evening division ofBrooklyn College in 1958.[5] The higher degree allowed Mac Low to support his artistic career as an instructor ofEnglish as a second language atNew York University from 1966-1973 and as a reference book editor for many publishers, includingKnopf,Funk & Wagnalls,Pantheon,Bantam, andMacmillan.[4]

In 1965, Mac Low gave lectures onmousike for the newly foundedFree University of New York.[6]

From 1964 through 1980, Mac Low participated as a visual artist, composer, poet, and performer in the Annual Festivals of the Avant-Garde in New York. In 1968, he signed the "Writers and Editors War Tax Protest" pledge, vowing to refuse tax payments in protest against theVietnam War.[7] His work was published in0 to 9 magazine, an avant-garde publication that experimented with language and meaning-making. In 1969 he produced computer-assisted poetry for the Art and Technology Program of theLos Angeles County Museum of Art.[5]

Beginning in 1981, Mac Low andAnne Tardos wrote, directed, and performed in seven radioworks.[5]

In 1986, he received a Fulbright travel grant for New Zealand, where he was the keynote speaker at the Australia and New Zealand American Studies Association conference at theUniversity of Auckland. He also participated in a composers' conference and led a workshop inNelson, New Zealand. He read, performed, was interviewed, and led workshops inWellington,Dunedin,[8] andAuckland as well.[9]

In 1989, Mac Low participated in the Fine Arts Festival at theUniversity of North Carolina. From 1990 to 1991, Mac Low served on the poetry panel of theNew York Foundation for the Arts. In 1993, Mac Low and Anne Tardos gave a joint concert of their works for voices with prerecorded tapes at Experimental Intermedia,New York City. In January 1996, he presented readings and performances at Cowell College of the University of California, Santa Cruz.[5]

In 2000, Mac Low performed two readings of his poetry at the Bjørnson Festival 2000 inMolde, Norway. He also unveiled a monument toKurt Schwitters on an island off Molde.[9]

Posthumously published work

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In 2005, Granary Books publishedDoings: Assorted Performance Pieces, 1955-2002.

In 2008,Thing of Beauty: New and Selected Works was published, edited by Anne Tardos.[10]

In 2012, Counterpath Press released154 Forties, a collection of poems written and revised by Mac Low between 1990 and 2001, edited by Anne Tardos.[11] Counterpath also completed a project of shooting videos of contemporary poets and artistsreading the Forties.[12]

In 2015, Chax Press releasedTHE COMPLETE LIGHT POEMS: 1–60[1]Archived March 1, 2015, at theWayback Machine, edited by Anne Tardos and Michael O'Driscoll.

In 2025, the MIT Press publishedThe Complete Stein Poems, 1998-2003, edited by Michael O'Driscoll.

Composition

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One type of non-intentional composition that Mac Low used relied on an technique he dubbed "diastic", by analogy toacrostic.[13] He used words or phrases drawn from source material to spell out a source word or phrase, with the first word having the first letter of the source, the second word having the second letter, and so forth, reading through (dia in Greek) the source.

Chance operations

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Jackson Mac Low is known for using chance and experimentation in the production of his diastic poems. He engaged in projects that would extract words from the work of other poets and writers through a specific system he devised in order to produce a new poem. He would often extract these words from texts he was reading on the subway during his commutes. One such example is Mac Low's "Call Me Ishmael", developed from the source textMoby Dick byHerman Melville.[14] "Call Me Ishmael" is a phrase from "Loomings", the first chapter of the book. Mac Low moved chronologically through the book after finding the phrase extracted from the source text, "Call Me Ishmael," and allowing the first letter of each word in each stanza to spell out "Call Me Ishmael." Additionally, he played with the repetition of the letter "L" in the third and fourth word of each stanza by allowing the fourth word to repeat the third. For example, the poem starts with the line "Circulation. And long long", spelling out the first part of the source-text phrase, "Call."[14]

Mac Low's interest in chance operations within poetry led him to adopt new experimentation techniques during his work on theStein series. He usedA Million Random Digits With 100,000 Normal Deviates, a book of random numbers developed to aid in the production of nuclear weapons during the Cold War, to randomly rearrange and rewrite text byGertrude Stein in a series of poems. He originally discoveredA Million Random Digits in 1958 and used it in work throughout his life.[15] TheStein series, between 1998 and 2003, marks one of his final projects.[16]Despite their mechanical nature, many of these chance poems open up space for sentimentality and delicate interpretation. One example of this is Jackson Mac Low's "Light Poems" that consisted of sentences randomly chosen from a chart documenting different kinds of light. In "32nd Light Poem:In Memorandum Paul Blackburn 9–10 October 1971," Mac Low uses this system of chance to pay respects to a late friend. The poem goes: "Let me choose the kinds of light/ to light the passing of my friend."[17] Although the process appears mechanical, the poems themselves reveal grief and other emotions that appear to be at odds with the process by which they were developed.[17]

Connection to anarchism

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Jackson Mac Low was invested in pushing the boundaries of author and audience. He regularly asserted that the author is not responsible for producing meaning, but rather creating the environment for the audience to extract a unique interpretation.[16] He was interested in the dynamic between chance and choice within syntax. Works produced by chance allow the performers of the poem to have their own sense of determinism, which reflects Mac Low's own anarchist affiliations. Speaking on this dynamic between the author and performers, Mac Low stated:

"Although performers are not directly regulated by a central authority, eventually they are, since I as the composer am giving them the materials, procedures, rules, etc. This is why I usually say these days that such performances are "analogies" rather than "paradigms" of free communities. Nevertheless, they're exercising their own initiative within the situation, the given materials being analogies of the real-life conditions provided by nature and society."[16]

Within Mac Low's work, he disrupts subjectivity through the use of chance operations and the responsibility to extract and enact meaning falls on the role of the reader. Because of this, the reader functions more as performer than the author. For Mac Low, this method of producing poetry reflects hisanarchist engagements because it dismantles the power structure between reader and author and serves as an analogy for a free community in which people make their own choices for how to live and structure their thinking and decisions.[16]

Connection to Buddhism

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Mac Low used chance operations as a way to distance himself from choice, therefore habit. Whether conscious or unconscious, these habitual decisions rooted in personal history create limitations for an individual. Mac Low rejected choice in order to reduce the habitual process of decision-making. This idea is rooted inBuddhism in which one achieves enlightenment through discovery outside of one's habits, culture, and personal history and the achievement of a greater sense of generality. Mac Low's use of chance operations allows for a greater degree of universality. Although the language used is not universal, the operations used to produce the poems can be applied to a variety of contexts.[18]

Awards

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In 1985, Mac Low won aGuggenheim Fellowship. In 1988, he was awarded a Fellowship in Poetry by the New York Foundation for the Arts. He shared an America Award withRobert Creeley'sEchoes for a book of poetry published in 1994.[5]

Personal life

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Mac Low was a pacifist and "anarchist-populist".[19]

Selected works

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  • A Piece for Sari Dienes (1960)
  • The Twin Plays (1966)
  • Verdurous Sanguinaria (1967)
  • August Light Poems (1967)
  • 22 Light Poems (Black Sparrow, 1968)
  • 23rd Light Poem (For Larry Eigner, 1969)
  • Stanzas for Iris Lezak (Something Else Press, 1971)
  • 4 trains (1974)
  • 36th Light Poem (Buster Keaton, 1975)
  • 21 Matched Asymmetries (1978)
  • 54th Light Poem: For Ian Tyson (1978)
  • A Dozen Douzains for Eve Rosenthal (1978)
  • phone (1978)
  • The Pronouns—A Collection of 40 Dances—For the Dancers (Station Hill Press, 1979)
  • Asymmetries 1-260 (1980)
  • "Is That Wool Hat My Hat?" (1982)
  • Bloomsday (Station Hill Press,1984)
  • French Sonnets (1984)
  • Eight Drawing-Asymmetries (1985)
  • The Virginia Woolf Poems (Burning Deck, 1985)
  • Representative Works: 1938-1985 (1986)
  • Words nd Ends from Ez (Avenue B, 1989)
  • Twenties: 100 Poems (1991)
  • Pieces o' Six: Thirty-Three Poems in Prose (Sun and Moon Classics, 1991)
  • Twenties(Segue, January 1992)
  • 42 Merzgedichte in memoriam Kurt Schwitters (Station Hill Press, 1994)
  • From Pearl Harbor Day to FDR's Birthday (1995)
  • Barnesbook (1996)
  • Stein Series (1998–2003)
  • 20 Forties (1999)
  • Doings: Assorted Performance Pieces, 1955–2002 (Granary Books, 2005)
  • Thing of Beauty: New and Selected Works, 1937-2004 (2008)
  • 154 Forties (Counterpath, 2012)
  • The Complete Light Poems: 1-60 (2015)
  • The Complete Stein Poems. 1998-2003 (2025)

References

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  1. ^Margalit Fox (December 10, 2004)."Jackson Mac Low, 82, Poet and Composer, Dies".The New York Times. p. A 39. RetrievedApril 1, 2024.
  2. ^Dumett, Mari (August 22, 2017).Corporate Imaginations: Fluxus Strategies for Living. University of California Press. p. 40.ISBN 978-0-520-29038-9.
  3. ^"Obituary: Jackson MacLow".TheGuardian.com. December 20, 2004.
  4. ^ab"Register of Jackson Mac Low Papers - MSS 180". Archived fromthe original on June 14, 2012. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2012.
  5. ^abcdefMac Low, Jackson."JACKSON MAC LOW: Curriculum Vitae".www.jacksonmaclow.com. RetrievedJanuary 26, 2026.
  6. ^Berke, Joseph (October 29, 1965). "The Free University of New York".Peace News:6–7. as reproduced inJakobsen, Jakob (2012).Anti-University of London–Antihistory Tabloid. London: MayDay Rooms. pp. 6–7. Archived fromthe original on October 12, 2012.
  7. ^"Writers and Editors War Tax Protest",New York Post, January 30, 1968.
  8. ^Mac Low, Jackson (May 23, 1986).Jackson Mac Low reading at Dunedin Art Gallery.UC San Diego Library Digital Collections (Audio). Jackson Mac Low: Selections. UC San Diego Library Digital Collections. RetrievedJanuary 26, 2026.
  9. ^abTardos, Anne."Long Biography – Jackson Mac Low".JacksonMacLow.com. Estate of Jackson Mac Low. RetrievedJanuary 26, 2026.
  10. ^Thing of Beauty. University of California Press.
  11. ^154 Forties. Counterpath.
  12. ^"Forties – Counterpath".
  13. ^Mordecai-Mark Mac Low, "The Role of the Machine in the Experiment of Egoless Poetry" in H. Higgins, & D. Kahn (eds), Mainframe experimentalism: Early digital computing in the experimental arts, pp.299.
  14. ^abMcHale, Brian (March 1, 2000)."Poetry as Prosthesis".Poetics Today.21 (1):1–32.doi:10.1215/03335372-21-1-1.ISSN 0333-5372.S2CID 109928857.
  15. ^PERLOW, SETH (2015)."Reading by Chance: Jackson Mac Low and a Million Random Digits".Paideuma.42:333–367.ISSN 0090-5674.JSTOR 43908416.
  16. ^abcdSpinosa, Dani (June 22, 2018).Anarchists in the academy: machines and free readers in experimental poetry. University of Alberta.ISBN 978-1-77212-405-7.OCLC 1083882356.
  17. ^abBrown, Brandon (January 2017). "Music of Chance".Art in America.105 (1):54–57 – via Project MUSE.
  18. ^Zweig, Ellen (1982)."Jackson Mac Low: The Limits of Formalism".Poetics Today.3 (3):79–86.doi:10.2307/1772391.ISSN 0333-5372.JSTOR 1772391.
  19. ^Banes, Sally (1993).Greenwich Village 1963: Avant-garde Performance and the Effervescent Body. Duke University Press. p. 127.ISBN 978-0-8223-1391-5.

Sources

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External links

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