Founded | 1942 |
---|---|
Founder | Leonard Baskin |
Country of origin | United States |
Headquarters location | Northampton, MA |
Publication types | One of America's earliest and longest-lived limited edition fine arts presses |
Nonfiction topics | arts, literature, poetry, the humanities, philosophy, the natural sciences and classic literature |
The Gehenna Press was one of the earliest limited edition fine arts presses in the United States. [1] Established in 1942 by sculptor and graphic artist Leonard Baskin (1922-2000) while still a student at Yale, the award-winning press went on to publish approximately 200 books in nearly 60 years, finally ceasing operation shortly after Baskin's death in 2000, which also makes it one of the longest-lived small presses in the U.S. [2] The Press is known for its imaginative printing, use of type, binding and book illustration, as well as its collaborative work with several key 20th-century poets, including the United Kingdom's Poet Laureate Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath and, posthumously, James Baldwin. [2] [3] Over the years, the Gehenna's work was widely exhibited in both museums and library collections, and its books are in public collections both in the U.S. and abroad. In 1995, Baskin and his work with the Press were recognized by the Library of Congress with a solo retrospective, the first for a living artist in its history." [4] [5]
Gehenna's emphasis on poetry begins with its name. The word Gehenna refers both to the Hebrew word for "hell" and a line from Milton's epic poem Paradise Lost: "And black Gehenna call'd, the type of Hell." [6] The wordplay goes even further, however, given how many "colloquial terms for printing made reference to devils, hell and 'the black art,'” [3] as well as Baskin's artistic tendencies toward the macabre.
Inspired by William Blake's poetry and illustration, Gehenna's inaugural book likewise reflected Baskin's interest in the fine art of book-making — type and binding — as well as the woodblock prints and other images he used as illustrations. The high-quality craftmanship of the books were coupled with playfulness: type set in triangles, diamonds and other shapes, emphatic imagery, energetic lines, a key focal point sometimes highlighted with a splash of green or red, geometry that could get complicated despite a rough-hewn quality, and some of which was characteristic of the antique Chandler & Price treadle press that Baskin initially used to set type by hand. [3]
Baskin's playfulness was eventually grounded by classic letterforms, particularly those designed and cut by Nicholas Jenson in Venice in the late fifteenth century, and revived in the early twentieth century. [3] This "look" accompanied favorite subjects that included notable figures from the history of art and bookmaking, natural history, the Bible, and mythology, [3] in addition to contemporary poetry and classic poetry and literature.
In keeping with Blake's model, the Press's inaugural book was a compendium of Baskin's own poems, and called On a Pyre of Withered Roses, a reflection of Baskin's interest in dark subject matter also evident in his visual art. [2] Gehenna's second publication was a Little Book of Natural History, published in 1951, and likely inspired by his 1946 marriage to Esther Tane, a nature writer. [7] That book was also several years in the making, interrupted first by Baskin's service in the U.S. Navy during WWII, and then by art school in Florence and Paris, respectively. [2]
"Until 1953, books were printed in Worcester, Massachusetts and then, from 1956, the Press established an office in Northampton, Massachusetts at the Metcalf Printing Press. Between 1958 and 1976, Baskin employed Harold McGrath (d. 2000) as pressman, with the responsibility for typesetting and printing. From 1957, Sidney Kaplan, a friend of Baskin's, became, as Baskin put it in the 1992 half-century exhibition catalogue of the Press's works, 'the editor of the press.'" [1] [8]
“People like me, who care about printing,” Baskin once said, “constitute the tiniest lunatic fringe in the nation.” [9] The introduction to the Archive of the Gehenna Press at the Bodleian Libraries at the University of Oxford neatly summarizes how Baskin's role at the Press changed over time, while also crediting the work of his colleagues and family:
The last book printed by Leonard Baskin himself was Blake and the Youthful Ancients (1956). Amongst other subsequent contributors, the letterpress printing was accomplished by Arthur (Art) Larson at Horton Tank Graphics, Daniel Kelleher at Wild Carrot Letterpress, Carol Blinn at Warwick Press and the Baskins' son Hosea Baskin, who printed Jewish Artists (1993) in Leeds. Arthur Larson also printed woodcuts, and Michael Kuch, etchings. The Oxbow Press (Roberta Bannister and Gail Alt), a photo-lithographic/offset printer, printed many of Gehenna's prospectuses and a few books as well, including The Gehenna Press: The Work of Fifty Years exhibition catalogue. Leonard Baskin continued to define the sensibility and typography and frequently the binding design of the books, as well as commissioning writers and illustrating the majority of the Press's works. [1]
In 1992, Southern Methodist University's Bridwell Library and the Library of Congress mounted an exhibition to commemorate the Gehenna's half-century mark. Bibliographer and antiquarian bookseller Colin Franklin, along with Baskin and his son Hosea co-authored a bibliography of the Gehenna Press from 1942-1992, and Franklin also wrote a critical assessment. Oxbow Press published the book-length result: The Gehenna Press: The Work of Fifty Years, 1942–1992. [8]
The University of Wisconsin's Messenger magazine described Baskin's book-making creative process, prior to the traveling exhibition Poets at Gehenna: 1959-1995 that was scheduled to visit the UW-Madison libraries in January 1997:
Traditionally, artists provide images for existing poems. For the Gehenna Press, poets work from Baskin's original prints or drawings. The monumental Capriccio with poems by Ted Hughes, Sibyls by Ruth Fainlight, and the most recent book of the press, Presumptions of Death by Anthony Hecht, have all come from this atypical approach. Other featured books and broadsides include: Hugh MacDiarmid's Eemis Stane, Anthony Hecht's The Seven Deadly Sins, Ted Hughes's A Primer of Birds and Moko Maki, and James Baldwin's Gypsy. Working manuscripts, preliminary drawings, original woodblocks, and sequential proofs illuminate the creative process from the viewpoints of both artist and poet. [10]
Baskin's most famous working relationship was with poet Ted Hughes. [3] " They first collaborated in producing the broadside, Pike: A Poem. Some fifteen years later, they renewed their Gehenna Press working relationship to produce A Primer of Birds (1981), a book of Hughes's poems illustrated by Baskin, and printed by the Gehenna Press in Lurley, a village in the English county of Devon." [3] Other notable poets who collaborated with Baskin include Archibald MacLeish and Wilfred Owen. [5]
In addition to his contemporary stable, Baskin also published, and usually illustrated, a wide variety of other poets and classic authors. The Gehenna's bibliography includes William Blake, Shakespeare, Aesop and Euripides, [5] [11] [12] as well as Henry David Thoreau's Civil Disobedience, letters by James Agee, stories by Joseph Conrad and On the Nature of Inspiration (1962) by William Morris. [13] [14] The many art books published by the Gehenna ranged from books on artisans, printers, surveys of Dutch art, sculpture and Jewish artists, to a book on Rembrandt. The most eccentric books directly reflected some of Baskin's more macabre visual interests, such as Demons, Imps and Fiends (1976), and Fancies, Bizarries & Ornamented Grotesques (1989).
Baskin was the recipient of numerous awards and honors for his work, including six honorary doctorates, [15] a Special Medal of Merit of the American Institute of Graphic Arts and a Printmaking Prize at the 1961 São Paulo Bienale. [16] In 1994, the Library of Congress held a solo retrospective celebrating the Gehenna Press. [5]
Edward James "Ted" Hughes was an English poet, translator, and children's writer. Critics frequently rank him as one of the best poets of his generation and one of the twentieth century's greatest writers. He was appointed Poet Laureate in 1984 and held the office until his death. In 2008, The Times ranked Hughes fourth on its list of "The 50 greatest British writers since 1945".
William Blake was an English poet, painter, and printmaker. Largely unrecognised during his life, Blake has become a seminal figure in the history of the poetry and visual art of the Romantic Age. What he called his "prophetic works" were said by 20th-century critic Northrop Frye to form "what is in proportion to its merits the least read body of poetry in the English language". While he lived in London his entire life, except for three years spent in Felpham, he produced a diverse and symbolically rich collection of works, which embraced the imagination as "the body of God", or "human existence itself".
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Leonard Baskin was an American sculptor, draughtsman and graphic artist, as well as founder of the Gehenna Press (1942–2000). One of America's first fine arts presses, it went on to become "one of the most important and comprehensive art presses of the world", often featuring the work of celebrated poets, such as Sylvia Plath, Ted Hughes, Anthony Hecht, and James Baldwin side by side with Baskin's bold, stark, energetic and often dramatic black-and-white prints. Called a "Sculptor of Stark Memorials" by the New York Times, Baskin is also known for his wood, limestone, bronze, and large-scale woodblock prints, which ranged from naturalistic to fanciful, and were frequently grotesque, featuring bloated figures or humans merging with animals. "His monumental bronze sculpture, The Funeral Cortege, graces the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial in Washington, D.C."
Songs of Innocence and of Experience is a collection of illustrated poems by William Blake. Originally, Blake illuminated and bound Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience separately. It was only in 1794 that Blake combined the two sets of poems into a volume titled Songs of Innocence and of Experience Shewing the Two Contrary States of the Human Soul. Even after beginning to print the poems together, Blake continued to produce individual volumes for each of the two sets of poetry.
Graham Percy was a New Zealand-born artist, designer and illustrator. His work was the subject of The Imaginative Life and Times of Graham Percy, a major posthumous exhibition of his work which was shown at galleries throughout New Zealand including City Gallery Wellington, Gus Fisher Gallery Auckland, Sarjeant Gallery Whanganui, the Rotorua Museum and the Southland Museum and Art Gallery, Invercargill.
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Karen Mulhallen is a Canadian educator, poet, essayist, critic and editor. She taught English at Ryerson University from 1967 to 2014. She served as the poetry review editor of The Canadian Forum from 1974 to 1979, and their features editor from 1975 to 1988. In 1973, Mulhallen became editor-in-chief of Descant until its closure in 2015.
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