Thursday, June 4, 2026

Typewriter 4








[Robert Caldwell, editor]
Typewriter 4
New York City / Iowa City, USA: Typewriter, 1973
[44] pp., 8 x 8.5”, softcover
Edition of 300


Issue number four [of ten, see below] of Typewriter, a publication largely focused on visual and concrete poetry. The volume is edited by Robert Caldwell with contributions by  Jeremy Adler, Bob Cobbing, Peter Finch, Hugh Fox, Michael Gibbs, Peter Mayer, David Mayor, David Oshel, Alan Riddell, Kent Zimmerman, and others.






Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Christopher Knowles | Typings (1974 - 1977)








Christopher Knowles
Typings (1974 - 1977)
New York City, USA : Vehicle Editions, 1979
[110 pp.], 28.6 x 25.8 cm., cloth
Edition of 500, unsigned and unnumbered copies


Christopher Knowles was thirteen years old when a family friend passed a cassette of his to playwright Robert Wilson. Titled "Emily Likes the TV”, the tape featured the young Knowles reciting the title phrase repeatedly, creating rhythmic repetitions and variations on the phrase "Emily likes the TV, because she watches the TV, because she likes it.” An adult Knowles can be seen reciting the work on Youtube, here

The audio poem brings to mind Steve Reich’s early vocal tape experiments like "It’s Gonna Rain" and "Come Out”, or the Modest Mouse song “Parting of the Sensory” in which a single phrase is repeated over and over again, with very slight alterations. Just enough to make singing along difficult. 

"I began to realize that the words flowed to a patterned rhythm whose logic was self-supporting,” said Wilson, later. "It was a piece coded much like music. Like a cantata or fugue it worked with conjugations of thoughts repeated in variations."

Wilson cast the teenage Knowles in a number of his productions, including his breakout (and still best known work) Einstein on the Beach, which contains some texts from this book. Wilson’s collaborator Philip Glass credits the texts with inspiring his contributions to the now-legendary musical. 

Knowles reportedly would create poems and paintings by signing lower right hand side of the page, and then working backwards to fill it with content. 

Poet John Ashbery wrote "Christopher has the ability to conceive of his works in minute detail before executing them. There is nothing accidental in the typed designs and word lists; they fill their preordained places as accurately as though they had spilled out of a computer. This pure conceptualism, which others have merely approximated using mechanical aids, is one reason that so many young artists have been drawn to Christopher’s work."

This 1979 hardcover volume [a softcover edition of 1000 copies was released simultaneously, see below] collects poems, texts and drawings made using the typewriter when the poet/painter was between the ages of 14 and 18.


"Christopher Knowles’ peculiar plastic management of words is the consequence of neurological damage he sustained before birth, which led to a form of autism. A self-taped recording of his speech-poems brought him, as a teenager in 1973, to the attention of the theatre and opera director Robert Wilson, and he has acted in and contributed dialogue to many performances since then. …

(In Knowles’ works) standard white stationery and long sheets of rice paper become settings for typed pictograms of alarm clocks, a window, a space needle and chequerboard patterns, all made up of accumulations of the letter ‘C’, Knowles’ first initial. His ‘typings’ show a preoccupation with repetition, permutation and seriality – qualities so dear to classic Minimalist art. Yet Knowles’ favoured formats in these typed works are music charts, where titles and careers are restacked and resculpted in permutations according to popular or personal whim. …

Knowles’ ‘typings’ build up words and phrases into intricate multi-coloured patterns using an electric typewriter. He is best known for his ‘typings’ of the 1970s and 80s, text-based pieces that were developed as a private pastime. The exceptional ability in mathematical organisation revealed in these works is a characteristic by-product of the autism which Knowles was diagnosed as a child. The works were created on an electric typewriter, using red, black and green inks."
- Max Andrews, Frieze







Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Endre Tót | One dozen rain pOstCarDs, 1971–73


















Endre Tót
One dozen rain pOstCarDs, 1971–73
Stuttgart, Germany: Reflection Press, 1973
[26] pp., 10,5×15 cm., loose leaves
Edition size unknown


A mini-retrospective of two years of Rain Postcards by Endre Tót, the publication reproduces twelve postcards altered by Tôt with a typewriter. They are housed in a rubber-stamped envelope which also contains a sheet of publisher's information. 

Titles include "Your Rain, My Rain", "Old Rain, New Rain", “Horizon Rain”, “Zero Rain”, “Sex Rain”, and (of course) "I Am Glad When I Can Type Rains”. 

Due to the homemade nature of the project, few examples are alike: some are in manilla envelopes, others white. The rubber stamps used to title the work vary also, with some including the artist’s name others, not. 

One dozen rain pOstCarDs, 1971–73 was published as issue 26b of Reflection Press - an imprint ran by Fluxus artist Albrecht/d which also published work by Ben Vautier, Dick Higgins, Throbbing Gristle, Milan Knizak, the Guerrilla Art Action Group, Charlotte Moorman, Ken Friedman, Joseph Beuys and many others [see below].






Monday, June 1, 2026

Lenka Clayton | How We Thought It Would Be And How It Was
















Lenka Clayton
How We Thought It Would Be And How It Was
Atlanta, USA: J&L Books, 2025
48 pp., 29.2 x 24.2 cm., softcover
Edition size unknown


My favorite representational works made using the typewriter come from Pittsburgh artist Lenka Clayton. Since 2012, she has produced more than five-hundred delicate drawings using a 1957 portable Smith-Corona Skyriter typewriter. 

This book collects twenty-three of them, made during the early days of the Covid pandemic. Subjects include the artist's grandmother’s thumb on the camera during a Zoom call, kitchen haircuts, quarantined mail, empty galleries, empty supermarket shelves, kitchen tea towels repurposed as face masks, and the ongoing struggle to remain optimistic. 

The book shares its title with an online exhibition at Catharine Clark Gallery. It is designed by Jason Fulford, who runs J&L Books with his partner Leanne Shapton.

How We Thought It Would Be And How It Was is available for $30 US from Printed Matter, here

Clayton is featured in the season finale of Art21’s Art in the Twenty-First Century, the first series on television in the U.S. to focus exclusively on contemporary visual art and artists. The episode is titled Human Nature and is slated to air later this month. 


Sunday, May 31, 2026

bill bissett | Image Being





bill bissett 
Image Being 
Vancouver, Canada: blewointment press, 1975
[32] pp., 15 x 15 cm., staple-bound
Edition of 300


Called “the greatest living poet today” by no less an authority than Jack Kerouac, bill bissett is the author of over seventy books. This early title is still available for around twenty-five dollars, despite being limited to three hundred copies and over fifty years old. 

The handmade book (with the cover and verso text hand scrawled) consists of typed poems, typewriter poems and simple marker drawings. 

My copy is signed to me and also contains the name of its previous owner: poet Earle Birney. 





Saturday, May 30, 2026

Rodney Graham | Typewriter with Flour







Rodney Graham 
Typewriter with Flour
New York City, USA: Self-published, 2003
40 x 50.2 x 10.2 cm.
Edition of 10 [+ 3 AP]


In 1996, Rodney Graham produced a four-minute 16mm film titled Coruscating Cinnamon Granules [see the mousepad multiple, here]. The work documents the sprinkling of cinnamon onto the surface of an electric stovetop cooking element, and the resulting sparks. The artist described it as "a glittering mini-spectacle that resembles a constellation of stars that appears before one's eyes after a mild blow to the head.” 

A few years later Graham discovered a 1930's typewriter made by the German company Rheinmetall in a Vancouver junk shop. 

"It was just this incredibly beautifully made, solidly designed typewriter. Not one key had ever been pressed on it," he said.

He used it to produce another work in which a powered cooking ingredient falls onto an object, like snow, or dust. 

Rheinmetall/Victoria 8 is a 35mm film installation, in which flour falls onto and gradually covers the typewriter [see below]. I can’t recall where I first saw it, but the looping mechanism and projector (the 1961 Victoria 8 of the title) threatened to overwhelm the visuals of the film. This is apparently not accidental. Graham described the machine, designed by the Italian company Cinemeccanica, as "very beautiful, kind of overly powerful [...] It's these two objects confronting one another, two obsolete technologies facing off.”

Valued at over twelve thousand dollars US, Typewriter with Flour version is just a still from the film housed in a lightbox, but I suppose it allows the collector to own the piece and have it in their home, without all the racket.


"While the film itself is silent, the installation became a rackety-clackety affair as the footage passed through the attractively cumbersome body of yet another outmoded device: a 1950s Italian-made Cinemeccanica projector taking up a good portion of the front gallery. The ventriloquized sound track at once reemphasized the distancing obsolescence of both machines and made felt their effusively physical presence.

Undeniably beautiful, the progressive accumulation on the old typewriter’s pristine though antiquated surfaces employs the best effects of well-metered cliche—invoking nostalgia only to lay bare its very mechanisms with Brechtian panache. Employing an old special-effects medium—sifted flour—to simulate snow or dust, the film sustains a taciturn balance between staid earnestness and tongue-in-cheek pastiche. As in much of his work, here too Graham employed emphatic repetition. The typewriter, once fully immersed in the white stuff (and thus transformed into both burial mound and winter wonderland), was, time and again, resurrected as the film looped back to its start. Graham, a longtime Freud aficionado, here rendered the typewriter into an updated— if already outmoded—mystic writing pad, without once stroking its keys.”
- Johanna Burton, Artforum












Friday, May 29, 2026

The Art of Typewriting









[Marvin Sackner, Ruth Sackner]
The Art of Typewriting
London, UK: Thames & Hudson, 2015
352 pp., 25 x 31.5 cm., hardcover
Edition size unknown


In 1979, Marvin Sackner discovered a book on the top shelf at Jaap Rietman's New York bookstore and excitedly turned to his wife: "Ruth, this is what we are collecting. It even has a name". The book was An Anthology of Concrete Poetry, edited by Fluxus artist Emmett Williams and released by the Something Else Press in 1967. The volume presented the first international overview of the medium, collecting works by Eugen Gomringer (Switzerland), Dieter Rot (Iceland), Daniel Spoerri, Claus Bremer and Hansjörg Mayer (Denmark), Bob Cobbing (England), bp Nichol (Canada), and many others. It was reissued 2014 by Primary Information, and can be downloaded for free, here.

Five years later, in 1972, the Something Else Press released Typewriter Poems, edited by Peter Finch. "As far as I know it was the very first book to anthologize typewriter work," Finch told me over email in 2014. Unlike An Anthology of Concrete Poetry, the slim Typewriter Poems concentrated entirely on British artists.

Typewriter Art followed in 1975, edited by Alan Riddell, an Australian poet who grew up in Scotland and was introduced to Concrete Poetry by one of its most celebrated practitioners, Ian Hamilton Finlay. It is now long out of print. Darren Wershler-Henry, a Montreal-based poet and cultural critic who was once the senior editor at Coach House Books, wrote The Iron Whim: A Fragmented History of Typewriting, in 2005. In 2014 graphic design scholar Barrie Tullett published Typewriter Art: A Modern Anthology.

The Sackner's The Art of Typewriting, gathering hundreds of works by both artists and poets, is the largest overview to date. The works come from the Ruth and Marvin Sackner Archive of Concrete and Visual Poetry, which exists in their home (it has been suggested that they exist in it) in Miami, Florida. Their archive of books, critical texts, periodicals, ephemera, prints, drawings, collages, paintings, sculptures, objects, manuscripts, and correspondence relating to Concrete Poetry contains over 75,000 items. Amassed over four decades, it is the largest collection in world.

The couple met on a blind date when Ruth was studying English at the University of Pennsylvania. They married in 1956 and had three children. They were together for almost sixty years. Ruth died in her sleep in October of 2015, at the age of 79. 

Marvin Sackner died five years later, at the age of 88. He was a successful pulmonologist who also invented medical devices. The royalties from these inventions provided the couple with the money ("play money" they called it) to invest in their art collection. Their holdings, while all text-based, include a wide variety of techniques, including hand-written artists' books, rubber-stamped works, artists' stamps and mail art.

The Art of Typewriting focuses on the works from their collection made with the manual typewriter. A chapter titled "A History of Ornamental and Art Typewriting", begins with a history of the machine itself, patented in 1869 and available commercially a few years later. Somewhat ironically, a condescending advertising campaign ("easy enough for a woman!") actually led to an influx of women in the workforce. In 1874, less than 4% of US clerical workers were women. Fifteen years later that number had climbed to 74%.

Unfortunately, the female artists in the book don't fare as well - by rough estimate their work makes up less than 20% of the almost 600 colour reproductions. Several of the earliest examples in the collection, however, were produced by women, including the first example of typewriter art ever published in a periodical. The work, an image of a butterfly, was by Flora F.F. Stacey, an English stenographer who had been 'drawing' with the typewriter for many years before winning an open competition in 1898.

Canadians, often omitted from international surveys, or represented by a token inclusion, fare much better here. The book features work by Derek Beaulieu, Earle Birney, bill bissett, jw curry, Paul Dutton, David W. Harris (also known as David UU), Steve McCaffery, Gustave Morin, bp nichol, and Mark W Sutherland. Interestingly, all but the latter come from the country's poetry, not visual art, communities.

Following the introductory texts is an expansive plate section, illustrating key works by over 200 poets and visual artists, beautifully rendered. These are divided into sub-sections, including sound poems, punctuation pictures, overtyped characters, canceled texts, textured texts, patterns, three dimensional objects, maps, erotica, love poems, typed artists books and many others.

Some categories work better than others. The 'erotica' is mostly nude photography with typewriter character shading, and the 'political' section includes a rudimentary tank fashioned out of slashes and dashes. The thirteen pages of 'typed representations of artistic works' features tributes and parodies of paintings and sculptures by Jasper Johns, Vincent Van Gogh, Mark Rothko, Jackson Pollock, Robert Rauschenberg, Brancusi and Mondrian. The 'sound poems' scores resonate simply from the suggestion that they be read aloud. Here solo works by nichol and Dutton (half of the Toronto sound poetry group The Four Horsemen) are included, alongside works by Bernard Heidsieck and Ernst Jandl.

But I find myself most drawn to the works at the extreme ends of the categorization: unstructured, expressive works and simple, restrained gestures. There are several pieces, for example, by Tom Edmonds, a concrete poet who died in his late twenties in 1971. They are striking dense, messy layered pages that appear almost three-dimensional. Inversely, the stark pieces in the 'punctuation pictures' section, benefit from their limitations. A simple and beautiful work by Claus Bremer retypes the alphabet twenty-six times, each time starting one space in but ending in the same place, a hard right margin. The characters that do not fit are overtyped. The work is part of his book Texte un Kommentare, which can be seen in the Youtube video below.

The Art of Typewriting is rounded out by an extensive bibliography and twenty-nine pages of illustrated biographies, including Tom Phillips (one of the Sackner's all-time favourites), Mary Ellen Solt, Emmett Williams, Carl Andre, Henri Chopin and Bob Cobbing.

An interesting, and undoubtedly costly, feature of the volume is that no two covers are alike. The book’s layout was created by the London-based graphic design studio Graphic Thought Facility, who utilized an algorithm to ensure that a unique combination of front and back image graces each copy of the book.

The ribbon bookmark is red and black, suggesting a typewriter ribbon. 

The Art of Typewriting serves as a useful introduction to the art form, an essential addition to any library dedicated to the subject, and a fitting tribute to the Sackners.