It is an academic truism
that the avant-garde has been dominated not simply by men, but by a masculine set
of ideals. This may be true, but we cannot let the conversation stop there.
experimental poetry is a vanguardist tradition, and one that is often conceived
of as a solitary act. But, in this book—and always—I envision a literature that
is built on writing as an act of sharing, of becoming stronger and more
beautiful in the ways that our writing reads back over the writing that came
before it, and leaves itself open and unfinished for the writing that comes
after. So, hidden in the vanguardism of the avant-garde is a deeply communal,
feminist poetics of derivation, homage, and love. My poems in this collection
work to bring the feminist, communal poetics to the fore of the visual poem
through the merger of the analogue technology of the typewriter and digital
intervention.
OO is deeply citational and works to forge a community
out of visual poets who continue to create softness in a kind of poetics
strangely named concrete. This project takes up a conversational, communal
poetics, quoting “lines” from visual and concrete poems and playing fast and
loose with the form of the glosa, where four lines from an original poem are repurposed
in a new poem as the final lines of four ten-line stanzas. (“Introduction”)
I
was very pleased to get my hands Toronto poet, editor, critic and publisher Dani Spinosa’s full-length visual poetry debut, OO: Typewriter Poems (Picton
ON: Invisible Publishing, 2020). As she suggests in her introduction, concrete
and visual poetries have long been male-dominated, and the female practitioners
over the past few decades, in Canada, at least, have been far less acknowledged.
jwcurry has repeatedly referred to Judith Copithorne, for example, a Vancouver
poet who has been producing and publishing visual and concrete works since the
late 1950s, as “our first lady of concrete,” but her work is often overlooked
(for a variety of reasons, one might argue) for the sake of others of her
generation who were more ambitious, prolific and male. This kind of reclamation
work is reminiscent of Dean Irvine’s work on the late Canadian poets Dorothy Livesay and Anne Wilkinson through Archive for Our Times: Previously Uncollected and Unpublished Poems of Dorothy Livesay (Arsenal Pulp Press,
1998) and Heresies: The Complete Poems of Anne Wilkinson, 1924–61
(Véhicule Press, 2003), or the more recent volume WANTING EVERYTHING: The Collected Works of Gladys Hindmarch, edited by Deanna Fong and Karis Shearer (Vancouver BC: Talonbooks, 2020) [see my review of such here]. There is
so much work that gets overlooked for arbitrary reasons, including gender, and
these reclamations become an essential literary service.
"Marianne Holm Hansen" |
While
I give Derek Beaulieu an enormous amount of credit for doing much of the work
of bringing concrete and visual poetry back into the Canadian mainstream (engaging
far more with the literary journals and the small/micro press than, say,
Christian Bök) from the late 1990s onward, there did seem a shift in the
conversation around visual and concrete poetries when Dani Spinosa and her pal,
Kate Siklosi (the co-founders/editors/publishers of Gap Riot Press, a
Toronto-based feminist chapbook press) appeared on the scene a few years ago with
a fresh set of eyes, an eagerness to learn everything they could about visual
and concrete works, and a healthy suspicion for how things had always been. Poems,
chapbooks and statements by Spinosa and Siklosi began to emerge, working to
question and challenge how writing is made, and how writing is seen.
Again,
as Spinosa writes in her introduction, the visual pieces in this collection are
built as part of a conversation with those who have engaged with the form, composing
her own visual pieces with titles after other practitioners of the art—Judith Copithorne,
Steve McCaffery, Shant Basmajian, Johanna Drucker, John Riddell, derek beaulieu,
Bob Cobbing, et al—and utilizing those pieces as small studies around each
individual’s work and practices. One could say that this collection is both Spinosa’s
personal study in the history of visual and concrete poetry as well as a
collection of original works. As she suggests, she brings herself into the
conversation. The collection offers fifty named poems set in five sections,
with a final section of ten further poems, structuring her sections in thematic
gatherings, the titles of which play off bpNichol’s infamous poem carved into the pavement along bpNichol Lane: “A LOOK,” “A LACK,” “A LIGN,” “A LOBE” and “A
LONE.” The ten-poem section “A LACK,” for example, focuses on women visual
poets, as “A LIGN” collects a series of poems named for poets such as bill bissett, bpNichol, Jiri Maloch, Pierre Garnier and David Aylward, who, incidentally,
was the author of the first book produced by Coach House Press back in the
early 1960s. There is something quite delightful in seeing Aylward’s name here,
and numerous other names that haven’t been on the radar of Canadian writing and
publishing for some time. She’s clearly done her research, and if one were even
to put together an anthology of or essay on the history of concrete and visual
poetries, this would be the list of names included. Or, given Spinosa’s deliberate
inclusion of these multiple women practitioners, this is the list of names that
should be included; and hopefully, in part through Spinosa’s work, a
list of names that will no longer be overlooked.
The
shift in visual and concrete poetries in Canada over the past few years has
been interesting to see, as Spinosa and Siklosi, both, seemed to emerge
simultaneously alongside other poets working to re-shape the art, from Eric Schmaltz
in Toronto, Sacha Archer in nearby Burlington, Michael e. Casteels in Kingston and
Kyle Flemmer in Calgary, among others. Each of these poets are exploring
fascinating directions, opening up the boundaries of visual and concrete works,
and Spinosa is now the third poet in this list to achieve a full-length published
debut, after Casteels’ The Last White House at the End of the Row of White Houses appeared in 2016 [see my review of such here], and Schmaltz’ SURFACES appeared in 2018 [see my review of such here], both of which
also appeared through Invisible Publishing. As well, there is an enormous amount
of play evidenced through Spinosa’s visuals, something that certain strains of
visual poetries have managed to forget over the years; the play of the late
Toronto poet bpNichol was such an essential part of his work and his life that
the lack of it in subsequent works is noticeable. With all of the serious
intent and study, where is the play? Dani Spinosa is clearly having a glorious
time, and it shows.
The
collection ends with a conversation between Spinosa and Siklosi, their “‘Like,
That is Femmeship’: An afterword in feminist conversation between Dani
Spinosa and Kate Siklosi,” a back-and-forth that articulates some of the
issues their works attempt to address. As they write:
D: But for some reason
that still persists in this niche little field of visual poetry. And also,
like, I had no idea about the long history of women who were doing this
particular work.
K: Yeah. You wouldn’t have
heard of that, right?
D: No. It’s been cold discovering
women writers who were doing typewriter stuff when I kind of wouldn’t have known
that before. And also, as I’ve been fleshing out this project, someone whom I have
been working with has been like, “Oh, cool, I’d never heard of Bentivoglio or
Hansen.” So, it’s not that there wasn’t a readership for it. People were
interested in finding out which other women had been working in visual poetry. I
just always feel like I understood the process of writing as writing on top of
other people who had been writing before me.
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