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Borderline: Invisible #poemenvylopes
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This makes too much sense... too much OVER THE TOP marketing and 1 million new books a year - this has obviously tanked our author's book sales.
And you know what? We here at Blue Indians will continue, as we have since 2011... we will NOT stop.
I have a short book out now. And plan more. Trace
THIS is the most important commentary on publishing I have EVER read.↓
A Writer’s Choice to Be Borderline Invisible
Small presses and editions remind us that that we’re free to stay below the radar in an age of self-promotion.
“Hell0 Please Remove Shoes” (all images courtesy Margaret Galey)Cid Corman started the magazine Origin
in 1951. With a few interruptions, he continued to publish it until
1984, often while he was living outside of the United States, in Matera,
Italy, and Kyoto, Japan. As far as I know, Corman, who believed there
were only 300 people who read poetry, did not increase the size of the
edition as the years passed. Many of his own books were printed in
editions of less than 200 copies.
The English poet Nicholas Moore
invented what he called “poemenvylopes”: poems and commentary that he
typed onto envelopes. He sent them to friends and acquaintances. Anthony
Rudolph told me that he received at least 100 “poemenvylopes” from
Moore. Who knows how many he sent out? While three were reproduced in
his Selected Poems (2014), most remain unknown.
“Love Shames Rose Peel Hole”
For
Alternative Press, which was run by Ken and Ann Mikolowski for more 30
years (1972–2004), Robert Creeley handwrote a poem on each of the 500
letterpress postcards he was given and made no copies. This means his
“Collected Poems” will always be incomplete. Creeley’s postcards were
put in mailers, along with bumper stickers, bookmarks, and other
goodies, and sent to subscribers. The content of every envelope was
unique.
Recently, I communicated with Happy Monks Press and
learned that their editions were limited to 25 copies, 10 of which go to
the writer. In the email I received, the editor said that he was fine
with being small scale and “borderline invisible.” This got me thinking
about a recent project I was given.
A few weeks ago, when I was
visiting Lexington, Kentucky, an old friend and curator Stuart Horodner
introduced me to the poet and artist Margaret Galey, who had moved there
from New York. During our conversation, she gave me a copy of a small
book that she had published in an edition of five, mostly as a gift to
Stuart, honoring their year of writing collaborations. It seems that
they had sent each other prompts via email for more than a year.
“See Ash Revel Oops Hello Me”On
cover of the book was a photograph of a white signboard with black
removable letters that read: HELLO/PLEASE/ REMOVE/SHOES. The four words
were arranged in a neat, symmetrically balanced stack, one above the
other. I was reminded of the signs you see in front of churches, often
carrying an inspirational message. While the message on this sign was
rather mundane, the cropped photograph did not indicate the
circumstances of its placement.
After talking with Galey, I
learned that the sign was the only thing on the walls of an AirBnB room
she had rented in Queens when she returned to New York in October 2018
to tie up some loose ends. During her stay, she began rearranging the
letters to spell different sets of words and photographing them. The
wisecracking Mae West, who once slyly said “you’ve got to use what’s
lying around the house,” seems to have been Galey’s inspiration. As I
see it, she was making concrete poem anagrams from the four words she
found herself looking at every day; the poems cannot really be separated
from the signboard and movable letters with which they were made. Galey
made 38 to 40 different arrangements, in each case using all the
letters. In the book, which consists of a selection of them, all the
photographs are tightly cropped, leaving only framed signboard and
letters.
“Hose Mole Shelve Rose Pale”What
struck me about this project was Galey’s use of a digital camera.
Transferring the images to a computer, she could crop them and decide
which ones she liked and the sequence in which they would be placed. She
then had the book printed by an image-publishing service. It would have
been nearly impossible to make this book during Cid Corman’s time,
which is to say before the digital age and the Internet.
It also
occurred to me that the edition was not closed; she could print more if
she wanted, and she could change the contents if she wished, so that
each edition, however large or small, would be different. When I
considered covering this project, my dilemma was whether to show pages
from the book or some of Galey’s photographs: neither would tell the
whole story, of course. I decided that I would show a selection of the
photographs. This way the reader will learn about Galey’s projects
without knowing if the photographs were chosen for the book. I wanted to
stay true to the possibilities of the phrase, “borderline invisible.” I
think we should remember this horizon as a choice in an age when
self-promotion has become commonplace.
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