Love and/or Terror
It's been a long time since I've blogged. There's an excellent artist's book/book arts (the two are not quite the same thing, but the differences aren't quite worth arguing about either) exhibition up at the University of Arizona Museum of Art. Excellent because it manages to present many aspects of the book arts while still remaining compelling, whereas it's too easy to be rather soft when trying to do so much at once. Perhaps it's the theme, Love and/or Terror, that keeps things on edge. Xu Bing's work in the show is a standout, a very humorous and intense indictment of the tobacco industry. Cigarettes with poems printed on them, cigarette label strings with The Book of Tao printed on them, and much more. 50 or so books, too many to describe. Just go there if you can, or visit
My own book in the show is a brief look at the presence of love and terror in American poetry from Anne Bradstreet to the present. Just a line or two of poems per page, on big pages, altogether forming a 20-foot long accordion-fold book, technically a leporrello binding. On the pages (which are Japanese handmade mulberry paper), other than the type, burgundy acrylic paint has been drizzled. A book thought out and planned for a month, then made in a day with a day for the paste used in binding to dry. Right now I love book making which does not overwork everything and make everything intricate, which tends to be a characteristic of handmade letterpress books. I want a sense of spontaneity, of the raw and sometimes imprecise nature of book making to show. The book is titled Whilst Love and Terror Laid the Tiles, which is taken from a poem by Ralph Waldo Emerson, titled "The Problem." Other than Bradstreet and Emerson, other poets (and one musician) represented are Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, H.D., Ezra Pound, Robert Creeley, John Coltrane, Harryette Mullen, Myung Mi Kim, William Carlos Williams, Ron Silliman, and me. I plan on creating a version of this book in an edition of 12 to 20, later this fall.
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