Showing posts with label Judith Copithorne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Judith Copithorne. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Eric Schmaltz: on Judith Copithorne (1939-2025)

 

 

 

 

When I first encountered the visual texts of the spirited “intermedia worker” Judith Copithorne, my understanding of what poetry and art could be was once again thrown wide open. It was in the pages of a 2010 issue of Rampike (Vol. 19, No. 1) that I first encountered Judith’s “Fleur.” A veritable bouquet of letters and lines extending in every direction, “Fleur” differed from what I had previously known of concrete poetry, which was then mainly the clean-lined minimalism of the 1950s and the typewritten excess of bill bissett. One year later, I was invited to co-curate a gallery exhibition of concrete poetry and text art for the Niagara Artists Centre, with Copithorne’s poem at the top of my inclusions list. This also marked the beginning of my long-distance friendship with Judith, which developed over the years as my dedication to what she calls “surprising writing” deepened. Since then, I have regularly returned to Judith’s work, which culminated in the publication of Another Order: Selected Works and brings poetry, prose, and visuals from across Judith’s 60 years of devoted artmaking. Her work has been a beacon for those interested in the interstitial, the bodily, the intimate, the explosive, and the strange.

"Fleur" by Judith Copithorne

In the years leading up to the publication of Another Order, Judith and I regularly spoke on the phone. I will always be grateful for those long hours of light-hearted and serious conversation, roaming from anecdotes of her childhood and artmaking to her sharp critiques of certain established scholars and poets. On one occasion, I asked her how she would describe herself, and she used the descriptor “intermedia worker,” an apt phrase given her penchant for artistic expression in the liminal expanse between discrete media.

Born in Vancouver in 1939, Judith first self-published Returning in 1965, a collection of lyrical poetry that foregrounds her life-long thematic preoccupation with love, vision, sensation, and cycles. From there, she became a true force in Vancouver’s scene with contributions to concrete poetry and other intermedia contexts from the 1960s through to the present. She was published in the first issues of blewointment and Ganglia and continued to publish her work with small or private presses since then. Her work has been anthologized in New Direction in Canadian Poetry (1971), The Cosmic Chef (1970), Four Parts Sand (1972), THE LAST BLEWOINTMENT ANTHOLOGY VOLUME 1 (1985), The Last Vispo Anthology: Visual Poetry, 1998–2008 (2012), and Judith: Women Making Visual Poetry (2021), among other places. Her work was also featured nationally and internationally in gallery exhibitions and shows. Despite this success, Judith’s work occupies a fringe space in writing, not always valued by wider the general public. She once recalled for me a time in the 1960s when she sold a print of her concrete poetry to a boy at a market who later returned with his mother demanding his money back. Presumably, the boy’s mother was offended by Judith’s far-out aesthetic that embodied certain hallmarks of the counter-culture movement or the way it balanced on the border between legibility and obscurity. 

"Another Order" by Judith Copithorne

"Phases" by Judith Copithorne

Despite this, her life-long practice was spurred by a genuine curiosity that drove her to explore a multitude of media and techniques, ranging from illustration, sketching, calligraphy, typewriting, graphic design, and more. Like any artist, her work transformed over the years, moving from the monochromatic and hand-drawn to vividly colourful later works, indicating that her own sensibilities were ripening and widening in dialogue with a world in flux.  

The title “intermedia worker” also engenders Copithorne’s role within Vancouver’s artistic communities. In the 60s and 70s, she was involved with the numerous of the city’s alternative art venues, including Sound Gallery, Motion Studio, and Intermedia, where she did everything from dancing with Helen Goodwin’s TheCo group to filling holes and sanding floors. As her friends and colleagues have told me, she frequently attended local events for many years after. It was a true honour to witness Judith at her final public reading in Vancouver just last spring, where she read at Pyatt Hall to a packed room of family, friends, and admirers from across generations, including Renee Rodin, Fred Wah, Stephen Collis, Dina Del Bucchia, and Daniel Zomparelli, with her characteristic cheekiness and professionalism. Judith dedicated much of her life to the proliferation of artistic practices and supporting the work of others, especially women, in her community. It was heartening to see Judith’s commitment and dedication reflected back at her on that night.

The evidence of Judith’s influence is enormous, perhaps most substantially verified by the publication of Judith: Women Making Visual Poetry, edited by poet Amanda Earl, which gathers work by women and non-binary poets and artists in the expanded field of intermedial poetics across the world. As Earl writes in her own reflection on Judith, she saw her “as a role model when I was told that few women made visual poetry.” Earl isn’t alone in recognizing the importance of Judith and her work. The Toronto launch for Another Order saw multiple generations of experimental poets gather, including Stephen Cain, Amanda Earl, Kate Siklosi, Jessica Bebenek, and Rasiqra Revulva paying homage to Judith and her legacy. Less anecdotally, however, critics have recently underscored the importance of Judith and her work. In her review of Another Order, Cathy Ford identifies Judith as “an artist of radical commitment, tempered by hard-won, revelatory thoughts, and uniquely visualized challenges.” Likewise, Trevor Carolan writes that Judith’s “probing crossmedia experiments with visual and concrete poetry broadened the limits of what Canadian literary adventuring could be, and in doing so, helped budge Vancouver from its once gender-biased, colonial identity.” Judith’s presence will always be with us; she had a part in shaping literature and writing in Canada as we know it.

I’ve always read Judith’s stunning staple-bound chapbook Rain as a poem about unrequited love. Published by Ganglia in 1969, Judith employs highly stylized strokes of what appear to be brush and pen. The poem begins with heartbreak and ends with a narrator who learns how to find pleasure within. “A shore / at last / reached,” says the narrator at the chapbook’s end. In another way, Rain is about one person’s emergence from confusion, suffering, and distress; it is a story about finding the way to light and clarity. We’re very fortunate to have shared this time on earth with Judith, to have witnessed her art and life that so illuminates for us a way of being and making that is honest and expansive, that opens for us “a home beyond / the dark / night sea / of rain.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

image credit: Judith Copithorne, photo by Ron Jansenn



 


Eric Schmaltz is the author of Borderblur Poetics: Intermedia and Avant-gardism in Canada, 1963-1988 (University of Calgary Press), Surfaces (Invisible Publishing), and the forthcoming I Confess (Coach House Books). He is the editor of Another Order: Selected Works of Judith Copithorne (Talonbooks) and co-editor of I Want to Tell You Love by bill bissett and Milton Acorn. His creative work has been published, exhibited, and performed nationally and internationally. He lives in Kjipuktuk/Halifax.

Saturday, May 17, 2025

Amanda Earl : on Judith Copithorne

 

 

 

 

When Joakim Norling of Timglaset Editions told me he had chosen green for the end papers for Judith: Women Making Visual Poetry after a colour used by Judith Copithorne frequently in her work, I knew I’d found the right publisher for the book that I had conceived of with Judith as its inspiration.

I asked Judith if we could name the book after her. She took some time to think about it and wrote “My mother chose that name as she thought that Judith was the first woman warrior in the bible which is not exactly the case i believe but it is a common idea so in that way Judith could be seen as a good name but i am a bit surprised. Also there was always a bit of a disconnect in my mind with that name.  When My mother thought of that name she was it seemed to me thinking of political activity, she was the first woman in the british commonwealth to keep her maiden name and art, literature, concrete poetry always seemed to her, I felt to be a bit too much of being a dilettante.”

Judith was very precise in her thinking and I always appreciated that about her. She was honoured and let us use her name for the book. I had the great opportunity to work closely with Judith in the making of the anthology and inclusion of her work. After issues with e-mail and the internet, she suggested we talk on the phone and to my delight, we had several lovely conversations, which I am  quite grateful for.

My first encounters with Judith’s visual poetry emboldened me. At a time when so much of vispo seemed to be a male-dominated arena to show off black and white grid work that worked very hard to follow in the tradition of Noigardes and other Concrete Poetry grid worshippers, Judith was doing colour and playing around a lot. She wasn’t a slave to analog. She worked with Adobe Illustrator before I’d even heard of the program. Then I saw her handwritten work and was in love with that too. Having her as a role model when I was told that few women made visual poetry made a huge difference to me. I write more about this in the anthology.

I am grateful to Eric Schmaltz and Talonbooks for publishing Another Order, Selected Works in 2023. I had the great honour of reviewing the book for Arc Poetry Magazine. I will always be inspired by the range of work that Judith created and her willingness to share it with the world through her social media posts on Facebook and also on Flickr. I hope that through Judith: Women Making Visual Poetry and Another Order, Selected Works, many more people will hear about her work and be inspired to take the kinds of risks with language and white space that Judith did.

 

 

 

 

Amanda Earl (she/her) [photo credit: Charles Earl] is the editor of Judith: Women Making Visual Poetry, the author of The Vispo Bible: Genesis and numerous visual poetry chapbooks. In 2024 she was the facilitator of the League of Canadian Poets workshop: Visual Poetry for Fun and Exploration, and offers customized workshops for women and non-binary artists wishing to make visual poetry. Amanda creates so that kindred misfits don’t feel alone. She is guided by duende, whimsy, exploration and connection. More info: AmandaEarl.com.

Monday, April 5, 2021

Joakim Norling : The Making of Judith

 

 

In early 2019 Amanda Earl approached me to ask if I would be interested in publishing an anthology of women making visual poetry, edited by her. It was a project which she had been thinking about for some time but not approached a publisher about. I had published Amanda’s ‘Revelation’ a couple of months before and she was pleased with the design choices I had made. At the time Timglaset Editions had been publishing chapbooks, artists’ books and quirky little objects for a little more than two years. Timglaset’s first perfect bound book was still a couple of weeks into the future and the thought of publishing an anthology with multiple contributors and maybe a hundred pages or more seemed daunting. Of course I accepted.

That was the start of the most exciting and exhausting project I have been involved in as a publisher. I had very vague ideas of what a publishing project of this magnitude might entail. As a publisher I was aware that about 90% of the submissions I got were from male poets and artists but could see for myself that there were many women regularly posting work on social media who never submitted their work for publication. I was also aware that women were strangely absent from the history of concrete and visual poetry. Amanda’s proposed anthology wanted to address the erasure of women from the history and present of visual poetry and I could see that there was a real need.

Between us we could easily think of about a hundred names that might be considered for inclusion in the anthology but none of us was very satisfied with that and we embarked on a journey of discovery which at the time of writing has resulted in a list of 1179 living women who make, or at some point in their careers as writers and artists, have made visual poetry. Getting to know the work of hundreds of very diverse, but brilliant and inventive, women has been one of the great joys of this project, which at some point was named in honour of one of its oldest participants, Canada’s Judith Copithorne, who started making visual poetry in the 60s and continues to do so today.

When we set out I could more or less intellectually fathom that an anthology involving multiple contributors would also mean that the amount of problems and decisions would multiply. But I wasn’t prepared for the scale of it. Luckily Amanda has turned out to be an editor of unearthly patience and perseverance, quietly documenting everything in spreadsheets, steadily pushing ahead when I have been secretly despairing. Over time “probably a hundred pages or more” has evolved into a 260-pages anthology with more than 160 images, contributions from 36 artists and authors from 21 countries. And add to that three essays, a round table interview and a foreword by Johanna Drucker. That scale of ambition was certainly not in my mind when we started out. The dreaded phrase “wouldn’t it be nice if…” got a positive ring to it, for the simple reason that most of the ideas Amanda brought to the table made the project stronger and made sense to me in relation to the mission we had set ourselves.

At the moment I’m designing the last few pages -- acknowledgements, colophon, table of contents. In a matter of just a few weeks ‘Judith: Women Making Visual Poetry’ will be sent to print. Both Amanda and I have spent hundreds of unpaid hours making this book but thanks to overwhelming support for our crowdfunding campaign it will be printed and distributed without financial risk to me, the publisher. For this and for being taken on this incredible journey I’m eternally grateful. And I suspect it isn’t quite over yet.

By the way, does anyone out there enjoy packing hundreds of books? Please get in touch!


 

The crowdfunding campaign for Judith: Women Making Visual Poetry is live until April 21 at https://igg.me/at/judith/

 

 

Timglaset Editions is a publisher of visual poetries and other forms of expression which blur the boundaries between literature and visual arts. Since 2016 we have published more than 50 chapbooks, full collections, posters and objects. Timglaset is based in Malmö, Sweden but has an international audience.

Joakim Norling is a 50-something university drop-out who has a dayjob in editing. After spending many years writing about music he got sick of his own words and discovered concrete poetry. Since then he has spent most of his spare hours editing, publishing, packing and sending Timglaset books.

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