I’m
stunned and deeply sad to hear that Fredericton writer, artist, editor, publisher, community
enthusiast, radio host and a ton of other things, Joseph Wendell (or simply, Joe) Blades died this past Wednesday. On Friday morning, the link to his obituary started floating around Facebook, which is how we first heard of it:
Age 58, Fredericton, NB,
passed away April 22, 2020. Joe was the son of Wendell and Phyllis (Pieroway)
Blades. He is survived by his mother and sisters Carol and Ruth (Mike Daye),
and was predeceased by his father, just one month ago. He was born in Halifax,
NS and was based in Fredericton, NB, since 1990. He grew up in Elmsdale and
Dartmouth, NS, and also lived, studied, and/or worked in Delhaven, Halifax, and
Port Hawksbury, NS; Toronto, ON; Montréal, QC; Banff, AB; New York, NY; Dumfries,
Scotland; Senta, Serbia; and Pale, Republik Srpska. He earned a Bachelor of
Fine Art (1988) from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, a Certificate
in Film and Television (2008) from the New Brunswick Filmmakers’ Co-operative,
and a Master of Education (2012) from the University of New Brunswick. Joe was
a writer, artist, and publisher–president of independent literary publishing
houses. He travelled extensively throughout Canada and Europe conducting poetry
readings and creative writing workshops and took great joy from working with
children and instilling in them a love of art and creativity through words. Joe
will be sadly missed by family and friends across Canada and around the world.
In honour of his memory, donations may be made to the Nova Scotia Writers
Federation or the charity of your choice. Cremation has taken place; a
celebration of Joe’s life will be held at a later date. Personal condolences
may be offered through www.yorkfh.com
Joe Blades, myself, baby Rose: Fredericton, 2014: photo by Christine McNair |
Given
this seems to have come out of left field, I am stunned, confused. I am sad at
the death of my friend. It is striking for me to realize that Joe was an early
mentor to me and my activity—even acting at times as an older brother—in a hands-on
way that so many others I would consider mentors and supporters during those
early days of my writing life simply didn’t, from my twenties engaging with Judith
Fitzgerald, Ken Norris, Michael Dennis and Diana Brebner to those mentors
during my later teen years, Gary Geddes and Henry Beissel. He’d been already doing a decade or more what I’d only just begun. Joe and I both produced
chapbooks, we both ran around the country doing readings, we both organized
events in our home-cities and hosted each other multiple times. We included poems by each other in our journals and schemes, and produced chapbooks by each other; we hosted each other. It was through Joe Blades that I was first introduced
to the work of R.M. Vaughan, then a writer still living in Halifax; it was
through Joe I was introduced to UNB’s QWERTY magazine (which then
introduced me to Andy Weaver, Sue Sinclair, Murray Sutcliffe and others), the
flyer soliciting work for the debut issue in one of the envelopes he regularly
sent my way of letters, poems, publications, notices, stickers and other papery
scraps. He knew everything, everyone. Every small scrap. Did you know he was around for the founding of The Writer’s Guild of Alberta? Apparently he’d been working
in Banff during those days, and was considered a founding member. He stayed at
every residence I had, from 1996 onward, with notebook and towering backpack,
having arrived first thing in the morning from an overnight Greyhound. He showed
up for the first few years of ottawa small press book fair, tabling his east
coast wares and spending more time at everyone else’s table than his own.
above/ground press, May 1994 |
I
first encountered Joe Blades either late 1993 or early 1994, having responded
to a notice he’d picked up somewhere about the new chapbook press and poetry
journal I’d started in July of that year. He seemed to know everything that was
happening in the small and micro press worlds, and everyone working the
literary DIY aesthetic across Canada, and various other corners as well. Despite
the geographical distances between us (Ottawa to Fredericton) we saw each other
once or twice a year, whether him coming through town, or us meeting up at a
reading or League of Canadian Poets conference in some other city.
We
toured together in 1998, five poets running around Canada for a five-poet anthology Joe had produced of our work—D.C. Reid (Victoria), Brenda Niskala
(Regina), Anne Burke (Calgary), myself (Ottawa) and Joe (Fredericton). A national
tour, during which we would read in each of our home cities, was organized,
with enough funding to get us across, and finally to Victoria, where the League
of Canadian Poets agm was being held. It was a tour, in part, to allow us all
the funding to get west for the conference. And we also thought it hilarious to
tour across Canada without even stopping in Toronto. From Ottawa we flew to
Regina, where a carload of poets landed in Brenda’s car and drove out to Winnipeg
to read, driving the next day to Saskatoon to read, the following day back to Regina
to read before driving to Calgary to read twice (where I first met derek
beaulieu in person), and then back to Regina, from where we each flew out to Victoria.
All of this was in a matter of days, with stops along the way at the Margaret Lawrence
House, and Indian Head. We talked, we adventured, we grabbed photographs of
each other and wrote poems, and gathered memorabilia, books and multiple
postcards. Our first few days with then-Regina-based CBC Radio freelancer Robert
McTavish, future editor of A Long Continual Argument: The Selected Poems of John Newlove (2007) that I co-published through Chaudiere Books, who was
recording and producing a radio documentary of our mad prairie poetry reading
tour. At the time, we theorized that we’d driven the equivalent of Paris to
Moscow. Another tour, a year later, found Joe and I in his parents’ house in
Halifax, with fiction writer Anne Stone, where we enjoyed fresh lobster caught not
twenty feet from his parents’ front doorstep.
STANZAS magazine #19, above/ground press, February 1999 |
There
were things about Joe that were constant: his expansive notebook, where phone
numbers, emails, appointments and first drafts of poems were collected. He would
often stop as we walked to pick up some small item or scrap of paper that he
would slip into his notebook or pocket for later. He collected “lost dog”
posters he pulled from telephone poles. He pilled other fliers that were glued
(with constant notebook companion, his glue-stick) into the pages. Elements of
found materials often made it into issues of his New Muse of Contempt
down the road, a journal as expansive in concern as his notebook: images, found
materials, poems, prose, lost dog posters and visual poetry. He had an interest
that expanded out into multiple directions, with no publication too large or
too small to catch his attention.
In
1996, heading north via multiple buses and ferries from Vancouver to Sechelt
for the sake of a conference on small and micro press that Victor Coleman and
Michael Barnholden organized, Joe took a photograph of me in front of Molly’s
Reach in Gibson’s Landing. Joe seemed to know everyone else at the conference: John
Pass, Tim Lander, Barry McKinnon, Victor Coleman. It was good to have him
there, for introductions. A few years back, I requested a copy of that photo, and
he mailed me a print-out. I would have preferred a digital copy. Why couldn’t he
have sent me a digital copy? Joe Blades and I at Molly’s Reach, where I purchased
postcards to send to my parents, knowing they’d get the reference. Knowing they’d
understand this one speck of my western trip at all.
We
were around for at least one break-up each, and I think he might even have assisted
one of my moves. He produced five of my poetry titles and two chapbooks, and I appeared
in a handful of anthologies he produced. I even edited five collections he published,
via my cauldron books series, under the wing of his Broken Jaw Press (Chaudiere,
I might point out, is French for “cauldron” or “basin,” providing moniker to both
the falls and the rapids along the Ottawa River). I produced a handful of his
chapbooks, and included him in numerous journals and anthologies I was putting
together as well. He was a one-man literary powerhouse, doing everything and
anything from the east coast, from hosting his weekly radio show to writing
reviews of books, chapbooks and gallery shows, producing poems, prose and
visual art, and producing books, chapbooks, magazines, zines, anthologies,
readings, performances, art shows, etcetera. What parts of literary activity
and production he wasn’t part of out there I never quite trusted; if there was
something or someone that didn’t want Joe Blades and his energy as a part of
what they were doing, it felt suspect, at least from here. I know he was hurt
to not even be included in an anthology of poetry from the east coast, as
though his thirty-odd years of writing and publishing activity hadn’t counted
for a damned thing. He was right to feel slighted, and it made me distrust some
of those other engines that much more.
above/ground press, May 1997 |
I
know he did feel frustrated out on the east coast for the lack of support he received,
as though he had to do everything himself, unable to find anyone to assist with
the reading series, or the publishing, or anything else. It made for some
difficult visits. It meant that sometimes he would appear in Ottawa and spend
the entire time vocalizing his frustration with the Canada Council, sales
force/distribution issues, or with East Coast poetry politics or with whatever
else that it left little time or energy for any other kinds of conversation,
including actually engaging with the activities he was doing, or what any of us
were doing. By the time he produced what would be my final Broken Jaw Press title in 2006, it felt as though he was the last one to realize that he didn’t want
to be a publisher anymore. He’d been worn down too far. His shift out of book
publishing and into a PhD at the University of New Brunswick in multi-media around
that same time was a positive one, although it meant far less travel and
touring. It meant we saw him less often. But it meant he could focus his
attentions on his own studies, and his production, and a direction that might
shift some of his financial opportunities as well. In 2011, the literary press I
was co-running at the time, Chaudiere Books, prompted a poetry manuscript out
of him, Casemate Poems (Collected) (still available through Invisible Publishing), resulting one of his few book-length poetry titles not out through
his own Broken Jaw Press. It’s a title that emerged through a residency he’d undertaken
a couple of years prior, and I think remains some of his strongest published
work. I’m incredibly proud of that book, and I think Joe was too, although it didn’t
provide his work the attentions I thought it deserved. Later on, in 2017, I even reprinted a chapbook I’d produced of his in 1997 as a “twentieth anniversary edition,” which I thought was pretty fun. His TRIBECA (above/ground
press), is a mixture of text and visual-collage, most of which he’d composed a
decade earlier while in New York City as, he writes in the new edition’s “Afterword,”
“a curatorial intern at the New Museum of Contemporary Art [where his journal
title New Muse of Contempt had emerged] as a chosen part of my Nova
Scotia College of Art and Design’s final year of BFA studies.”
Looking at these poems
now, as well as related ones, I keep returning to Delaney quote at the front of
this chapbook. I believe these poems contribute to a portrait of New York in
1987, and that they still share a story of that place and time. More people
dream of going to New York than actually do. I have done some edits to some of
the poems herein but essentially they remain the same. What has changed is not
even mentioned herein: removal of self from most poems, fall of the towers,
waterfront condo(m) developments in Halifax, etc. Twenty years is considered a
generation. Wow! Time enough for so much to change. What will anyone think or
feel about these poems today? Except for my ongoing use of manual typewriters,
this piece excepted, what do I do now? I have so many more poems and situations
addressed.
The last time I saw Joe in person was in 2014 (where Christine took this photo of
us), although I did receive an email not two weeks before he’d died,
mentioning, among other things, that his father had recently passed. Towards the
end of Christine’s maternity leave year, we spent more than a week driving east in the fall of 2014 with baby Rose, and one of our stops was at the University
of New Brunswick were Joe was working that week on the election, managing to
get lunch with him there. It was familiar, sitting with Joe in the food court
with Christine and baby Rose. As though nothing had changed between us, and
nothing would. We would meet again. As he wrote as part of his Casemate Poems (Collected) (Chaudiere Books, 2011):
because i’m back in the
casemate of public art
because there are always
more stories to tell
14 comments:
Thanks so much for this, Rob. I've always thought of you and Joe as best buds in the poetry world. Now I know more about why. He was one of the good guys and learning of his passing made me sad. I'm gonna miss him, too.
a lovely remembrance, rob.
be well,
matt
A generous and loving remembrance, rob.
A lovely remembrance, rob; thank you so much for posting this.
A wonderful and thoughtful tribute; thanks for writing it.
Hi Rob ... Nice words about Joe , He was a great help to so many .
Truly a wonderful description of Joe and his marvellous, multifaceted work, as well as of your long friendship with him. Thank you for writing it. He published both my poetry ("Antimatter") and my translations of Nela Rio's work, and we co-published several books as well: Broken Jaw and White Dwarf. He often stayed at my house when he was in Montreal, as I did in his when I was in Fredericton. Joe had a tremendous impact on experimental, cutting-edge poetry and art in Canada, constantly in the vanguard of what could be done. He was so talented and energetic that he forged his own way, opening up that of other like-minded writers, including recent immigrants as well. When the establishment refused to recognize him, it was because he had left them far behind. And, as you said, those marvellous notebooks, like illuminated manuscripts with found objects! His radio broadcasts featured some of the wildest spoken word I've ever heard, and from all different countries and sources. Every once in a while he would mail out "a little something" in which poetry and visual art spoke together. What a unique and powerful voice he was.
I remember him as a kind ,generous and gentle man. Thanks for this wonderful tribute. I am sorry for the loss of your friend.
Thanks for sharing your memories with us.
From Patrick Woodcock:
Thank you for writing such a touching tribute. I was devastated to read about Joe, especially since I hoped to visit him again this year. I thought I would share one special story about our friendship. Although both Canadian and poets, Joe and I did not meet until we were at a conference in Serbia in 2005. I remember how kind and generous he was when I showed him the unpublished manuscript I was working on. We shared quite a few stories, poems and beers over a couple days and then went our separate ways. In 2015 I moved back to Canada but relocated to Musquodoboit Harbour, Nova Scotia with my fiance. After about a week back in Canada I told Kim and her mother that I was going to drive up the Eastern Shore for a half an hour and then come back. At roughly 30 minutes I was welcomed by the house of folk artist Barry Colpitts for the first time. I immediately fell in love with it and pulled into their driveway to take a few photos of the art hung outside of the house. When I walked around to the back of it I looked up to see a poem by Joe painted between two windows. When Barry found me outside looking up at the poem he asked if I knew Joe and I said we had met once, ten years earlier in Serbia. Barry loved this. I wrote to Joe when I returned home and we immediately renewed our friendship - usually meeting at his parent's house. Every guest who visited me was taken to Barry's, shown Joe's poem and told this story. I will miss Joe but at least I have memories like this and his poetry.
If you'd like to see a photo of this poem in all its wind and winter worn glory, please email me at williampatrickwoodcock@gmail.com.
rob, you are the best possible person to write a tribute to Joe. You were always his brother in small press world. He spoke of you often to me, with love and admiration, back in the late 90s when he was mentoring me in publishing and helping me get a foothold in the east coast poetry circuit.
Joe was a dear friend, a mentor, and felt like family to us at the League of Canadian Poets.
As rob indicated we all did a cross-Canada poetry tour and the resulting book was
Open 24 Hours. A sequel was intended to be Breakfast All Day. But our lives
did not intersect again, unless it was at a meeting or a reading. Joe was Maritime
Regional Representative (for a long time), Membership Chair and then President of
the League of Canadian Poets. He held a massive New Members
Reading with a line-up extending outside the building. Joe had a strong spirit and
and a gentle nature which drew students to him. He appeared everywhere in print and
online. You always felt that the conversation you began could be picked up again
and now that will not happen. Thank you, Joe, for sharing your time with us.
Such precious time, as we know realize. No wonder, you took on so much and
always hoped to accomplish more.
Anne Burke
Past Membership Chair
League of Canadian Poets
A perfect storm of missing and lost poets led me to discover that Joe too is gone. I didn't expect to get the news directly-we haven't connected for years but as the initial New Muse, we resonated fiercely like Emerson's iron string, like water and fire, like sweet rivers like transcontinental divides like love and wait, what? Where is RM? Where is Joe? I remember rob and so many many more poets reading ranting and paddling the outer realms of this staid country. We created alternate universes where the stars are underground and the routes lead to tributaries upon tributaries, road trips (3), sleepovers and canoes. Good night, dream sweet, take heart in your ephemeral art joe, it lingers on, but in a good way
Hey Joe I donated to CKUA today. In your memory
You and I we did some radio You of course did more
Take a walk on the wild side is the request. But I know you are I know you are. Sometimes I am just awash with sadness and reverie and melancholy and tears running like a river suite
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