Monday, 13 October 2014
Lines in the Ice
My latest book ITOQQIPPOQ - which was acquired by the British Library in the summer - will be shown as part of the British Library's exhibition Lines in the Ice: Seeking the Northwest Passage which runs from 14 November 2014 to 29 March 2015. Lines in the Ice examines the role of the Arctic regions in the making of the modern world. ITOQQIPPOQ will be in the company of early European maps of the Arctic, Inuit accounts of the coming of explorers and writings from the long search for the explorer Franklin. The curator has contributed a post to the BL's American Studies blog which gives an exciting glimpse of some of the other works that will be on show.
Thursday, 9 October 2014
Manchester Artists Book Fair 2014
I will be showing my work at Manchester Artists Book Fair later this month, and I'm delighted to announce that I'm sharing my stand with visiting New York artist Roni Gross, who has been invited to give two printing masterclasses at Hot Bed Press in Salford (details here).
We're looking forward to presenting some of our recent collaborative projects, including the first UK showing of Tikilluarit. The Book Fair is a great opportunity to talk to artists about their work, so do visit if you are in the area.
Tuesday, 9 September 2014
Arctic Events in Oxford
You are warmly invited to come and celebrate the launch of my (small) UK tour at The Albion Beatnik in Oxford on 30 October. I will be joined on stage by the magnificent MacGillivray, of whom more below. (Other readings will happen in Newcastle, Brighton, Bristol, Bedford and London this winter.)
The Albion Beatnik
34 Walton St, Oxford, OX2 6AA
30 October 2014
7.30pm
Free entry
Wine bar available

The Albion Beatnik
34 Walton St, Oxford, OX2 6AA
30 October 2014
7.30pm
Free entry
Wine bar available
MACGILLIVRAY has walked in a straight line with a dead wolf on her shoulders through the back streets of Vegas into the Nevada desert, eaten broken chandelier glass in a derelict East Berlin shopping mall, headbanged in gold medieval stocks in Birmingham allotments, burnt on a sun bed wearing conquistador armour in Edinburgh’s underground city, breast-fed a Highland swan in Oxford and regurgitated red roses in Greenland.
She remains the clan chief.

Monday, 18 August 2014
Arctic Events in Newcastle
In November the Lit & Phil in Newcastle-upon-Tyne will
host two events as part of the series Quujaavaarssuk and the Queen of the Sea. The Lit & Phil is a venue full of character, which possesses - among other things - a mesmerising collection of early literature on the Arctic - I spent several months researching in the stacks on my return from Upernavik in 2010.
Ice and the Imagination
Tuesday 4 November 6pm
FREE
This
wintery workshop will take classic works of polar exploration and natural
history from the Lit & Phil collection as a starting point for new writing
about ice, snow and the environment. Poet Nancy Campbell will introduce work by
contemporary writers on the subject and guide you through prompts to create
your own poems and stories.
Seven Words for Winter: Arctic Poems
Monday 17 November
7pm
FREE
In this reading Nancy Campbell will evoke the atmosphere of ‘the most
northern museum in the world’ on the remote island of Upernavik in Greenland.
These poems describe the disappearing arctic language and environment and
retell the colourful myths of the Inuit coastal community. The evening will
open with readings of new work from writers who participated in the Ice and the
Imagination workshop.
Numbers are limited so booking is advised for both these
events.
Please contact The Lit & Phil, 23 Westgate Road, Newcastle upon
Tyne, NE1 1SE
Tel: 0191 232 0192
Email: library@litandphil.org.uk
Thanks to Arts Council England for supporting these activities
The Arctic Book Club
‘Our words are a kind of rescue team on a relentless mission
to save past events and extinguished lives from the black hole of oblivion, and
that is no easy task; along the way they are welcome to find some answers, then
get us out of here before it is too late. Let this suffice for now, we’ll send
the words on to you, those bewildered scattered rescue teams unsure of their
task, all compasses broken, maps torn or out of date, yet you should welcome
them. Then we shall see what happens.’ From Heaven and Hell by Jón Kalman Stefánsson
This winter you are invited to explore the Arctic … in five books.
Starting in October, the Arctic Book Club will
meet every month in Oxford. Over a traditional
Greenlandic kaffemik (cakes, coffee and chat) each month we’ll read and
discuss a recent piece of writing about the Arctic, from fiction and travel
writing to poetry and essays, including Barry Lopez’s classic Arctic
Dreams and Hannah Kent’s highly-acclaimed recent novel Burial Rites.
No specialist knowledge required – this will be a fun and
friendly way to learn more about the growing genre of writing on the polar
regions. As well as the main titles, I can offer suggested background reading for super-keen or speedy readers.
These meetings are free. Places are limited so booking is essential. Email me (nancy@nancycampbell.co.uk) for more information or to secure your place.
Dates:
Monday 6th October
- Burial Rites by Hannah Kent (novel)
Monday 10th November - Arctic Dreams by Barry Lopez (natural history)
Monday 8th
December - A Dream in Polar Fog by Yuri Rytkheu (novel)
Monday 12th January
- True North by Gavin Francis (travel)
Monday 9th February - Open forum. Bring your own favourite Arctic reads to discuss and recommend. (I'll bring a selection of recent poetry collections on Arctic themes by British poets, and read some traditional Inuit poems - in Tom Lowenstein's excellent translation.)
I am grateful to Arts Council England for a Grant for the Arts to support this activity
Thursday, 12 June 2014
Poems for summer
Here’s some summer poetry reading recommendations (with a narcissistic twist).
Two poems from my Greenlandic series have been accepted by The Rialto, one of my favourite magazines – notable for its glorious artwork (the exuberant cover to this issue is by Angie Lewin). You can buy The Rialto in all good bookshops, and here. From Norfolk to Melbourne, where How To Say ‘I Love You’ In Greenlandic features in Australian Poetry Journal 3.2 – this is a special full-colour edition of the journal devoted to Concrete poetry. I discovered several exciting new writers and artists in its pages. Another arctic poem ‘Fragment’ will appear in Magma 59, on the theme of breakages. Finally, an extract from my long poem The Course of Empire, set in Massachusetts, appears in Stravaig, the journal of the Scottish Centre for Geopoetics, edited by Elizabeth Rimmer. It is available online to all for free here.
Sunday, 1 June 2014
Arctic Encounters
Dr Simone Abram reads Itoqqippoq
The groundbreaking research project Arctic Encounters: Contemporary Travel/Writing in the European High North invited me to exhibit a selection of artists' books at a conference on The Postcolonial Arctic at the University of Leeds in May. The exhibition represented a selection of work created during the last five years, both my own books and those featuring my poems designed and printed by Roni Gross and Peter Schell of Z'roah Press in New York.
Arctic Encounters describes itself as 'an international collaborative research project that looks at the increasingly important role of cultural tourism in fashioning 21st-century understandings of the European Arctic. The project’s general objective is to account for the social and environmental complexities of the High North – an area which incorporates some of Europe’s most geographically extreme regions – as these are inflected in the mutual relationship between a wide range of recent travel practices and equally diverse representations of those practices framed in both verbal and visual terms (e.g. travel writing and documentary film).' I encourage readers to read about the project's progress on their blog.
The conference was an exciting opportunity to exchange ideas with leading international thinkers on many aspects of Arctic life. I learnt a great deal, and my conversations helped me develop ideas for future projects. I'm grateful to the Arctic Encounters team and the School of English at the University of Leeds for their warm hospitality.
Kaffemik: Discussing the (Icelandic) weather with Ingrid Medby and Michael Leonard
A talk on my work in the Alumni Room (under the watchful eye of Jon Silkin)
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