The Gates of Paradise - Hundreds of shape poems to the unbound human self by David Daniels and friends. Including selections from his biographical visual epic, Years.
Graffiti: The Writing On The Wall - Index to scores of graffiti sites. One of the best sources for graffiti art is what the artists put on-line themselves.
Kaldron On-Line - Official site for the visual poetry magazine. Archives, articles and presentations of individual poets.
Lettriste Pages - Main site on the web for this French visual poetry movement, censored out of standard Concrete anthologies. Among other distinctions, Lettrisme was the art form of the 1968 French Students' Movement that came close to bringing about a revolution. Work by founder Isidore Isou, and members from succeding generations.
Poesia Intersignos - Documentation of a visual poetry show curated by Philadelpho Menezes in Sao Paulo, Brazil, this site provides many examples from around the world. If you don't read Portuguese, don't let the opening screen scare you: the examples won't present problems.
Poetic Solutions : Poemas interreales - An intersemiotic site: original graphics, translations, poetry, concrete poetry and art, multilingual domain names. Flash design is used in various pages. The Web Design Poet Award resides at Poetic Solutions. In English and Spanish.
SeaMonstersTheatre - Poems, photographs, and other radical stuff contaminated by freaky SeaMonsters of the world. Submissions welcome.
Strings - Dan Waber's playful series of Flash pieces about relationships.
Tom Phillips Home Page - Centering on A HUMUMENT, this site includes information about Phillips' projects and samples on new pages of his magnum opus.
The Word Project - A new media project uniting words and image - visual poetry, conceptual art, wordplay, and new age philosophy.
Workshop of the Scripturality - The site presents the artwork of Joƫlle Dautricourt on writing, Hebrew and Latin letters. In English and French.
Workshop with Hungarian Visual Poets - Poetry by Maria Hegedus, Tibor Papp, Gabor Toth and others, most publishing in Hungarian Workshop magazine, which helped keep a sense of community going, even when some of these poets lived in exile.