
Watch Flux Film 001:
John Morse / Roadside Haiku
a documentary by Proper Medium
2:29 minutes
Starting August 17, 2010
Well-traveled roadways in Atlanta, including:
Boulevard, Buford Highway, Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, Memorial Drive, Moreland Avenue/Briarcliff Road, Glenwood Avenue, Edgewood Avenue, North Avenue and Roswell Road
Bandit signs, the small, corrugated plastic advertisements
planted with wire stakes into the ground or stapled onto wooden
power poles at edges of roadways and the corners of busy city intersections,
normally feature business promotions underscored by a sense of urgency
(LOSE 30 POUNDS IN 30 DAYS!!!, GET CASH NOW!!!). They are universally
recognized, read by virtually everyone who glances at them, and are so
common that they need no introduction to the average passerby.
What an ideal place for poetry.
Using the brief format of traditional haiku—three lines of
five/seven/five syllables—John Morse transforms the familiar
bandit sign into a delivery device for poetic snapshots of the urban
condition presented and consumed within the brief seconds of stop and
go traffic. Five hundred 12" x 18" signs, in editions of 50 that
each feature one of 10 different haiku (eight in English, two in Spanish)
will appear throughout Atlanta.
Traditional haiku relies upon a seasonal reference (kigo), with a mention,
perhaps obliquely, to the season in which the haiku is written. In its opening
lines, Roadside Haiku also offers a kigo of sorts, with ostensible nods
to the defining consumerist allure of a bandit sign: making money, losing
weight, selling old gold, yard sales, etc. Within the 17 syllables, however,
the Roadside Haiku reveals an entirely different message, offering
compact observations and commentary on modern life.
Special Thanks to Custom Signs Today, Midtown.