Breaking Lines

15 January 2025 to 11 May 2025 The Estorick Collection

Image: Carlo Carrà, Atmospheric Swirls – A Bursting Shell, 1914, Estorick Collection
Image: Carlo Carrà, Atmospheric Swirls – A Bursting Shell, 1914, Estorick Collection

The Estorick Collection starts 2025 by exploring the revolutionary world of experimental poetry.

The Estorick Collection starts 2025 by exploring the revolutionary world of experimental poetry with two intersecting displays, Futurism and the Origins of Experimental Poetry and Dom Sylvester Houédard and Concrete Poetry in Post-war Britain, which opens on 15 January until 11 May 2025. 

Although better known today for its contribution to the visual arts, Italian Futurism was in fact founded and led by a poet - Filippo Tommaso Marinetti. The many writers who gravitated toward the movement went on to produce a body of work that was as groundbreaking as that of its painters. Futurism and the Origins of Experimental Poetry charts the distinct phases through which Futurist poetry passed, with a particular focus on those forms of experimentation that reflected the movement’s desire to “redouble the expressive force of words” by emphasising and exploiting the visual and/or sonic dimensions of language.
 
The show includes rare original editions of works including Fortunato Depero’s famous ‘bolted book’ Depero futurista, as well as newspapers and journals such as L’Italia futurista, which made a significant contribution to the dissemination of new poeticresearch and helped establish an international avant-garde network.
 
This display complements an exhibition focusing on the work of Dom Sylvester Houédard (1924–1992), widely recognised as one of the masters of concrete poetry. A Benedictine monk and noted theologian, Houédard wrote extensively on new approaches to creativity, spirituality and philosophy, and collaborated with figures such as Gustav Metzger, Yoko Ono and John Cage. His work, which blurs the boundaries between literature and visual art, helped shape the development of post-war British poetry, and influenced the global experimental poetry movement. Works by several other British exponents of concrete poetry, including Ian Hamilton Finlay, John Furnival and Bob Cobbing will also be on display.

Breaking Lines
Futurism and the Origins of Experimental Poetry /
Dom Sylvester Houédard and Concrete Poetry in Post-war Britain

15 January – 11 May 2025

Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art, London, N1 2AN

Adult £9.50, Over 60s £7.50, Estorick Collection Member Free

Tickets: Book Tickets - Eric and Salome Estorick Foundation - Art Tickets

Further Information:  Breaking Lines - Estorick Collection