Tuesday, 28 October 2025

The Wanstead Independent Book Fair / Too much artwork?

 


I'll be selling stuff at this book fair. 

Let me rephrase that: I'll have work on a table which people can buy, if they wanna. It's the first fair I've done so  don't know what to expect in terms of sales. We'll see.

More info here 

Along with original pieces of visual poetry and my books there will be collages. 


Here's a recent piece I made...

Unreal, RTomens, 2025

Preparing for the fair, choosing what to take, meant sorting through all the boxes and realising...oh shit...there's too much! I got sick of the sight of it all. Which made me think that less is more when it comes to a customer's eye and maybe I should take less than I intended, which was to maximise the space in folders and on the table because if I feel sick of seeing it perhaps they will too. There is such a thing as too much choice.

Then there's the other little voice inside saying 'No, take as much as you can because that maximises the chances of someone seeing the one they want.'

Could I have a bargain bin? You know, the kind of thing you see in charity shops filled with scarves and crumpled ties...a quid each. I'd put my...lesser (?) work in there...because I do know what's lesser amongst all the pieces I've created. By what criteria? It's an instinct, as well as looking objectively. That aside, there is a lot which could go either way; pieces I think are OK but someone else might love. 

I'm sure all prolific artists have contemplated either giving away their work or just chucking it out. I could put a boxful out the front of the house and let people help themselves. Looking at the mess of papers as I have this week, it's tempting. What would it matter to me? Someone might take it home and treasure it. Wouldn't that be better than just storing it in boxes? 

I'll let you know how it went.

TTFN

Sunday, 12 October 2025

Be Kind (assholes) / Erasure drawing / Love letters/Poem collage

Two Kinds Of People, RTomens, 2025

Fans of John Waters will recognise the quote in the piece above - paraphrasing, to be precise. Come on, Robin, that's a bit harsh...just because someone doesn't think like you doesn't make them an 'asshole'! No, no, it doesn't, you're right. Be nice. Be tolerant. Be Zen. I'm only playing with the idea. It may be something we all think sometimes. Sometimes we think terrible things...unkind things. Social media is ablaze with disagreements and abusive comments...don't join in...even when you read a comment by someone and think 'You asshole!!!' (In the UK, it would be 'arsehole', of course.)

Why make art? Why argue? Why go for a walk? Why anything? Another erasure piece below. I like to 'draw' (although LJ challenges me when I say I'm 'drawing'. But I am, aren't I? I'm just not drawing anything other than lines and shapes. 

Why Anything, RTomens, 2025

Love letters...once upon a time we wrote them. I suppose newer generations write 'love emails'? It doesn't have the same romantic ring to it, does it? Actual letters on paper could be felt...the indentations of a pen on paper...a smell, perhaps, like some I received from a girl who doused the pages in perfume. Your lover handled the paper...perhaps they creased a top corner by mistake...their hand is evident...oh poor modern generation...you will never know the pleasure of a letter from a lover! When one affair ended, I burnt all her letters. I wish I hadn't but at the time I needed to perform that drastic action, that symbolic (?) torching of words she wrote. Our love affair was never destined to rise from those ashes!

Love Poem/Love Letters, RTomens, 2025

Tuesday, 7 October 2025

Jean-Francois Bory - Some Like It With Words exhibition

 


I hadn't heard of Jean-Francois Bory either (oh, you had? Good, well done. You are attuned to the outer fringes of the artworld!) but knowing the curator, Frédéric Acquaviva, I was aware of this one-day show on Saturday so I went along and I'm very glad I did because the works on display were amazing, from the visual poetry to the typewriter 'sculptures'. The man himself was present and it was good to have a chat with him. Frédéric is curating another show featuring a selection of artists very soon in London. I'll let you know the details when I know. meanwhile, enjoy the images...
















Saturday, 27 September 2025

Joe Tilson - The software chart questionnaire - The Magazine of the Institute of Contemporary Arts (May/June, 1968)


Took a punt on this seeing as it was reasonably priced online. The best feature is undoubtedly Joe Tilson's 'software chart questionnaire'. It reminds me of the art/text intersection explored by New Worlds magazine from the same period. I looked up the forthcoming 'book' mentioned on the final page but it turned out to be a plush portfolio of prints, therefore way out of my price range should any appear for sale. Never mind. I'm very happy with these pages in the ICA magazine. 








Wednesday, 24 September 2025

The entrance to Hell / 'Anarchist' book fair groupthink hell / Vispo: For All I Care

 


I found the entrance to Hell on Saturday. It's near Waterloo station. 

Meanwhile, just a few yards away, I had to enter another kind of hell, the Anarchist Book Fair.

Yes, I had to enter because I was helping someone do a mimeograph workshop. My job being to type some stencils to be rolled through the mimeograph machine.



Apart from the Clod magazine stall and a couple of others I noted as I sped through the tunnels (yes, the event was in some tunnels - how...underground! - what's more, tunnels famous for being decorated by graffiti artists, as if the political messaging from the stalls wasn't traumatic enough my eyes were treated to a visual blitz of spray can...stuff) the politics all ran down the same tram lines (oh, plus, at least a few old-school sellers offering theoretical history books which, in this context, seemed quaintly old-fashioned since some of it was peddled by bearded men to whom Kropotkin actually meant something).

I used to think anarchy was about rebellion and free-thinking but here was a majority all saying the same thing instead of offering alternatives to the regimented official Alternative - blah, blah. 

I'm too old to care?  

To me the spirit of anarchy resides in Dada, in actual diversity of thought, in unique creative vision etc.

What do I know? 

For All I Care, RTomens, 2025


Thursday, 18 September 2025

Metafisikal Translations - Eduardo Paolozzi / Paolozzi's artist's books (absence of)

 


I've been watching it for years. 

The price never dropped.

I couldn't afford this, the one artist's book by Paolozzi that I didn't have. 

Three weeks ago I got a tax rebate so I could afford it, in theory, but should I really spend that much on one book? A 48-page, screen printed book from 1962, signed by Paolozzi. Big deal!

'You don't need it.'
'Of course I don't need it. Who actually needs books? What do we 'need' apart from food, housing and enough money to pay the bills?'
'Then again, what's money? There are no pockets in a shroud, are there?'
'No, so you can't even take one book with you when you...go.'
'Don't remind me, please, of either my mortality or the fact that my book collection cannot go with me...and anyway, it'll be nothingness...forever...'
'So before you sleep The Big Sleep, buy what you want if you can afford it!'

Luckily, a London bookseller was offering Metafisikal Translations at the joint lowest price online so I emailed them and cheekily asked if they could drop the price at all. They agreed. It still took me a few days to finally decide to buy it.

Little seems to have been written about Paolozzi's artist's books. They're mentioned in some monographs, usually in passing. The best source has been Eduardo Paolozzi - Writings And Interviews, edited by Robin Spencer, a superb collection and essential for anyone wanting to dive more deeply into Paolozzi's work. That does include this book and The Metallization Of A Dream, but strangely, neither Kex nor Abba ZabaThe Metallization Of A Dream does get two pages to itself in the Whitechapel Gallery's monograph to accompany their major exhibition in 2017 and Judith Collins at least dedicates a page to Paolozzi's use of texts in her monograph, tying in his word collages with Gysin and Burroughs' cut-ups.

Obviously his major works according to most critics will be the sculptures, followed by his prints and collages but as someone who works with words and has had a few books made I naturally find Paolozzi's books fascinating. Anyway, here are a few pictures of my Metafisikal Translations. You can scroll through the whole book here on the Tate gallery page.










Tuesday, 16 September 2025

Vispo: I Meant To Say / Keep on taking the tablets / Type, Type Overtype/ On making mistakes in Art (?)

 

I Meant To Say, RTomens, 2025


This one almost ended up in the bin at the early stages but I decided not to let it go, not to give in. It wasn't even due to exist because I was only testing the printer and having done so decided to work with the result. 

Earlier this morning, one did go in the bin. It wasn't going that well anyway when the doctor called, which broke my flow, my concentration (I do actually concentrate when typing, you know, despite results which sometimes suggest otherwise) - two more tablets to take - whoopee! Soon I'll be a walking dispensary with a body functioning purely on complex chemical combinations designed to give me more time on planet Earth - more time to make art - yes! Be positive! As a kid watching The Six Million Dollar Man I dreamt of having bionic parts like Steve Austin that would enable me to be a superhuman. Today, the reality is that my science/medicine-enhanced self will soon be taking seven tablets a day just to stay alive and be able to walk about.

So I start anew with what became I Meant To Say. A few loose lines, wavy lines of various letters. Those you can still just about see behind the dense slab of letters that form the main shape and they emerge above it. It wasn't going well. I had no direction, or rather, no sense of direction as I usually do, the kind born not of planning but in the moment, working as the act of typing takes over, towards something.

Oh, I may as well draw some circles. Why not? They can't ruin what isn't much to start with. Look for some text and find it in Paul Valery's Analects (Vol 14). Add that. 

Almost give up.

I'll add a figure. Make him small. Careful about where he's placed. Yes, just right.

The typing that followed was a kind of manic desire to erase all legibility. Overtyping is a stubborn act, I know. It demands persistence beyond reason. Well, I was in that kind of mood by then.

Type
Type
Type
Type
Type
Type
&
Type

Then stop.

You'll note a mistake. That one almost caused me to stop right there, but I remembered Sun Ra saying something like 'Why don't you do something right and make a mistake?' Only yesterday I read a quote from Mark E.Smith saying 'With our stuff, I don't want to make it faultless like, cos then you've just blown it' (from Messing Up The Paintwork). 

Some mistakes are good. Some are just mistakes which don't ruin whatever they occur in and some really do add to a creation. Compared to computer-created text/visual poetry, the typewriter is a mistake machine. There is typed visual poetry that is the result of painstaking perfection, each letter/mark placed perfectly to create a clean, complex, tidy image. I always think the artist doing that in on the spectrum. I have neither the patience nor skill to do that kind of thing. My work is probably littered with 'mistakes', by which I mean wrong moves which I manage to use to the advantage of the piece which grows organically as a result.

Life's too short to worry about small mistakes but if I keep on taking the tablets I'll have longer to make a few more.

Wednesday, 27 August 2025

Vispo: What Did He Say?

What Did He Say? RTomens, 2025

As in you're unsure of what he said because he mumbled or spoke whilst others were speaking or spoke quietly...

...or as in you can't believe what he said, even though you heard it quite clearly. 

People can talk loud and say nothing, as James Brown told us. Talk today is cheap, if by talking we include online chat. Talk's currency has been devalued by the internet. Once upon a time, talking was actually opening your mouth and saying something to a person nearby. Do you remember when we'd go to bars and talk? People still do that, of course, but in my life it happens far less frequently these days. I 'don't get around much anymore', as another song goes.

Today we talk to people we've never met and will not meet. Our 'friends' and 'followers' or someone who's neither. Some even argue with names online. I confess to having done so years ago, but I've wised up to the futility of that. In a cynical mood, I may even doubt the worth of an online stranger-friend - any of them. People request my friendship frequently. I rarely accept. Only a good shared friend may tempt me. Half the time these people only want you to see what they're doing, having no interest in you or what you're doing - the nerve!

Thursday, 21 August 2025

Vispo/drawing: Tired

Tired, RTomens, 2025

Our minds have grown tired...

It's conceivable that even the youngest (adult) mind may grow tired...tired of constantly scrolling, perhaps...tired of thinking about life - even as a teenager!

Meanwhile, at the other end of life, I have a good excuse - the accumulation of years can weigh heavy - memories are a burden! Carrying this mind and these bones around for almost 70 years! 

In Tired, The Walking Man (featured in previous pieces) has given up walking. He has laid himself down for a rest, trying to blank out the chatter of text, of people. He wants peace. He should visit the countryside, where the only sounds are those of the birds.