Showing posts with label Artists' Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artists' Books. Show all posts

Friday, 6 April 2018

Upcoming Event: BALTIC Self-Publishing Artists Market


Come to BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead on Saturday 21 April for the BALTIC Self-Publishing Artists' Market. I'll be exhibiting my work alongside over fifty other international artists, small press publishers, printmakers and zine makers. 

Monday, 9 October 2017

Small Publishers Fair, London


Don't miss this feast of books! 

Friday 10th and Saturday 11th November 2017
Conway Hall, London 
11am - 7pm

Friday, 14 April 2017

BALTIC Artists’ Books Market


Come to BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead, on Saturday 13th & Sunday 14th May 2017  for the annual Artists’ Book Market, 10.00-17.00 each day.

The market is a wonderful event that I’ve been proud to exhibit at for the last three years. This year look out for Stichill Marigold Press (run by poet and former merchant seaman Leonard McDermid - also once my primary school art teacher!),  Visual Arts in Rural Communities and of course the impassioned presswork of organiser Theresa Easton. Full programme info below.

BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead plays host to an annual national two-day Artists’ Book Market. Over 40 national and regional artists, bookmakers, small press publishers, artist’s groups, zine artists and bookbinders will be exhibiting and selling their work direct to the public.

This two-day event is FREE and accompanied by a series of artists’ interventions: BALTIC Freelance Artist, Bethan Maddocks will be delivering a free drop in 3D pop-up book workshop on Saturday. Sunday Nicola Singh plans to engage book market visitors with an evolving page projected onto the wall of the book-market. Foundation Press will be bringing their Risograph Printer for both days, working collaboratively with visiting artists in their pop up space on Level 1, creating a new body of work in performance and print.

Exhibitors include: Kitbooks, Shoddy: a disability art project, GINNY, Simon Moreton, Tamsin Daisy Rees, BBB Book Collective, Gemma Lacey/Red Plate Press, Kerry Douglas and Gillian Stewart, Stroud Artist Books, Jessie Churchill, Andrew Robinson & Andrea Campomanes, Andrea Allan, Hestan Isle Press, Elizabeth Jardine Godwin, BookCasePress, Chloe Spicer, Julie Macbean, Visual Arts in Rural Communities, Nancy Campbell, Newcastle University, As Yet Untitled, Stichill Marigold Press, Malcolm Gibson and Rachel Gibson, Roncadora Press, MA Book Arts at Camberwell College - University of the Arts London, Heather Prescott, Michelle Holland, Z.A.M, Less Than Five Hundred Press, Greyscale Poetry Zine, Asterisk Collective*, Kate Jackson, POUR-ZINE, Anne Proctor, Moonkwayk Studio, paperwallah, Hazel Terry, Sue Bennet, SideburnedPoet, Katie Forrester, Editions, Bertrand Bracaval, Theresa Easton.

Wednesday, 15 February 2017

Events



I'll be performing or exhibiting my work at these events over the next few months. Further information on times, venues and booking can be found on my website

This year's World Book Night United Artists project takes place over 10-12 March in Loch Ness. Watch this space to see whether we spot the Monster!

Sunday, 6 November 2016

New edition!


A new edition of How To Say "I Love You" In Greenlandic has just been launched by MIEL books.

The new edition beautifully captures the colour and texture of the pochoir prints in the original artist's book, with its twelve postcards digitally printed on 300gsm cotton card stock, and an essay on Greenlandic language and landscape in the accompanying booklet.

MIEL books are offering an introductory discount of 30% to customers buying the book before 14 November 2016 - just quote the code WELCOMETOGREENLAND when you visit the online shop.

Friday, 17 June 2016

The Polar Tombola comes to BALTIC Gateshead

What happens when a language disappears altogether? 

If you were asked to exclude just one word from your own vocabulary, what would you choose? 

Come to BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead on Saturday 18 July to answer these questions and puzzle out some new ones. The Astonishing Polar Tombola runs from noon to 3pm as part of the annual Artists' Book Market, an amazing weekend celebration of books organised by Theresa Easton. Over 40 national and regional artists will be displaying their work in the BALTIC galleries and artist-led workshops will be in progress for those who want to make a book themselves. Entry is free.

Image (c) Caspar Evans / Small Publishers Fair

The Polar Tombola welcomes players of all ages and languages. Learn a new word from an endangered Arctic language, and leave behind one of your own words in return. By playing the game you will take part in a movement to raise awareness of vulnerable languages, and your word could be included in the Anthology of Abandoned Words, published by Bird Editions in 2017.


The Polar Tombola was first performed at the Small Publishers Fair, London in 2015, and a Grant for the Arts from Arts Council England has allowed the project to tour. Look out for future events in London, Cambridge and Bristol over the following year. There's more information about the project in this post about the 2015 event.

Sunday, 1 May 2016

"How To Say 'I Love You' In Greenlandic" News

'A book that is not only beautiful but full of joy, love and quiet intensity.' 
- Oliver Clark, Collinge and Clark Rare Books, London


I'm delighted to announce that How To Say 'I Love You' In Greenlandic: An Arctic Alphabet is being reissued by MIEL books. This reformatted and updated version of MIEL's popular pocket edition (first published 2014) will be available in October.


Want to read more? Here's a blog post on ice and alphabets written for MIEL back when the first pocket edition came out. Or an in-depth feature article on the people behind my story, published in the Independent. And Saradha Soobrayen, poet and librarian at the Poetry Library in London, reviews the first MIEL edition here.

MIEL's first edition of How To Say 'I Love You' In Greenlandic sold out quickly; guarantee your copy and support this amazing small press with a 2016 subscription. Can't wait until October? There are still copies of the original deluxe edition available.

Thursday, 28 April 2016

World Book Night 2016 : The Handmaid's Tale

We were the people who were not in the papers. We lived in the blank white spaces at the edges of print. It gave us more freedom. We lived in the gaps between the stories.

The United Artists assembled in the Grand Ballroom of the White Swan Hotel, Halifax on 23 April for the annual World Book Night event. This year The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood was selected by artist, performer and writer John Bently. The 16 artists present created Serena Joy, a portfolio of miniprints responding to the text, from rubber stamps contributed by 43 international artists. We were lucky to have rubber stamp authority Stephen Fowler in attendance. After a hard day at the inkpads, a musical sermon by John Bently and the Eyes brought events to a close.


Pleasure is an egg. Rubber stamp by Corinne Welch, printed by Mette-Sofie D. Ambeck 


All Flesh. Rubber stamp by Jane Cradock-Watson, printed by Angela Butler


Serena Joy: the final set, complete with gilded box. 
Photo: Sarah Bodman

You can see all the finished prints and read a full list of contributors on the UWE Book Arts website, where there is also a link to John Bently's impassioned rendition of 'Amazing Grace' and other delights. Many thanks to Sarah Bodman who assembled this digital record, as well as coordinating the event and curating the Serena Joy portfolio.

If it's a story I'm telling, then I have control over the ending... But if it's a story, even in my head, I must be telling it to someone. You don't tell a story only to yourself. There's always someone else. Even when there is no one.

Sunday, 28 February 2016

Artists' Book Fair: Leeds


I'll be exhibiting at the International Contemporary Artists' Book Fair at The Tetley in Leeds on Saturday 5 and Sunday 6 March. You can find me there throughout the weekend, or join me for the launch of a new book, Death of a Foster Son, at noon on 5 March.

Monday, 8 February 2016

Proviso

proviso

This is the text of the talk I gave at the launch of proviso 
at the Small Publishers Fair, London, on 6 November 2015
More information on proviso here


In 2010 I travelled to Greenland. I ended up leaving a word behind there. I’ve tried to get through the last five years without it. It’s a common word, without an obvious alternative, so occasionally I have to reorder my sentences in a convoluted manner to get around the fact it’s not there any more.

Why do this? Partly, it was a promise I had made. Before I left the UK I stayed with my good friends Frances and Nicolas McDowall who run the Old Stile Press in the Welsh Borders. It was December, and snow fell until their house was surrounded by deep snowdrifts. We joked that it was probably unnecessary for me to go to Greenland - there was enough ice and snow on our doorstep. It was like the trial runs polar expeditions used to go on: I practised all the activities I had planned for the Arctic, such as writing in the snow with maple syrup, and allowing the lines of sugar to harden into candy. When I finally left Frances and Nicolas inundated me with things I might need on my travels. I don’t remember when they concocted the scheme to give me a word to take away with me. Perhaps over a glass of Campari by the fire in the evening.

This word had been letterpress printed at the press several years before as part of a commission: a keepsake for a grand dinner held by a major media organisation. It is a beautiful piece of typography, though modest in size. But after printing was complete, the organisation changed its strategy, and the McDowalls were left with a large edition of these words, which lay forgotten in their attic.

Anyone who has trained as a letterpress printer or typefounder, who has cast type from molten lead, tin and antimony, and then set and printed it by hand, will understand how language begins to grow concrete in the process. I have often adapted my texts according to the number of sorts I had in the typecase, for example. In Greenland, by contrast, my experience of language was the reverse of physical. This is an oral culture, where for many years words were passed on in songs and stories, and never written down. As a writer, I found this historical lack of textual authority challenging. The original Danish missionaries did too: when they came to Greenland in the 18th century they introduced printing, despite the problems presented by using ink in freezing temperatures. But does printing ensure a language’s survival? Soon Danish was the first language of the nation, and by 2010 West Greenlandic was accorded vulnerable status on the UNESCO Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger.  

In Upernavik I got to thinking about the English words I had, valuable words to me, that were useless in Greenland, and thinking about the words that the Greenlanders were using. I began to gain a few Greenlandic words and I realised if I stayed there long enough I’d probably lose some English ones.

In Greenlandic a single word can express concepts that other languages tiptoe around with a phrase. I was delighted to discover that on waking up in the morning I could say nuannarpoq rather than ‘I am full of a delirious joy in being alive’. Or illisiverupa, which means ‘to put something away in a safe place and be unable to find it again’. As I grew accustomed to densely-woven Greenlandic, with its small alphabet of only 19 letters and polysynthetic words, I began to find English finicky and prim in contrast. As though they were knucklebones used in a game of dice, I shook up tiny English words and scattered them before my audience, having little influence on the score.

The Greenlandic language has always been haunted by absences. When spoken, the suffixes are uttered so softly that an untrained ear cannot hear them. Verbs accrue morphemes, while nouns tend to disappear. It was once customary to name people after objects, but since a taboo forbade reference to the dead, the favoured objects were repeatedly renamed. The original names/words were never used again. The power of such words is not diminished by their absence from the vocabulary.  

proviso documents an intervention I undertook at Upernavik Museum as part of my investigation of lost languages. A clause in my contract as Writer in Residence read ‘Visual artists must leave a work behind in the museum, but writers are not required to do so.’

This proviso irked me a little. I understood that it was merely a reflection of the lack of prestige accorded the written word in Greenland, the preference for visual media. Needless to say, it was liberating to be excused from producing any work during the residency. However, it seemed strange that I should be exempted on account of working with language, when the Greenlandic language had proved such a rich resource for me. It set me to wondering how I might circumvent the rule and leave something verbal behind. Something not too obtrusive, something that no one would have to read. (I was thinking of the environmental caveat - variously attributed - ‘take nothing but memories, leave nothing but footsteps’.)

So I decided to leave behind just one word. Luckily I had a manifestation of language handy, in the form of the printed fragment created by Frances and Nicolas! I decided to not only leave the paper behind, but also excise the word from my language, so that I would never be able to use it again. It is a word on which future actions depend, so it is relevant to a place where decisions are being made that may change the fate of the globe. Climate change for example, or isolated events, like the recent, controversial proposal for a uranium mine in South Greenland. Of course, the word also features in a famous English poem.


It was to the Greenlandic dictionary that I turned as a custodian, leaving the word between its pages. Greenlandic has a long tradition of adopting loan words so I like to think my insertion will be welcome. Of course, that word was only one of a large edition printed by Frances and Nicolas. Perhaps it was the weight of all these unwanted words that led me to create the artist's book proviso as a record of the intervention. My own vanity likes the idea of leaving things behind too much.


Photographs (c) Peter Abrahams / Lucid Plane

Saturday, 7 March 2015

Existence Doubtful

Existence Doubtful by Tatiana Ginsberg, 2007

Last month I interviewed American paper artist Tatiana Ginsberg, whose work explores insular, oceanic and polar themes. You can read the interview over at The Island Review.

Sunday, 1 March 2015

Bristol Artists Book Event 2015

I'll be showing my books at BABE on 11 and 12 April. Not so much a book fair as a big book party, previous events have seen a dress made of lettuce, a team of cake-laden 'trolley dollies' and even a rogue trader.

Check the Arnolfini website for a full listing of the many exciting things on show during the weekend, which includes the chance to see work by Mike Nicholson and Mette-Sophie D. Ambeck, Old Bear Press and seekers of lice, together with many other artists and publishers, as well as the exhibition Book Acts by AM Bruno... and if you can't decide where to start, you can join one of the free tours.

As in previous years, free surgeries will be held in the Reading Room. Bring your book arts conundrums - don't be shy, nothing is too delicate - for a 20-minute discussion on Saturday (with me) and Sunday (with Simon Goode, founder of LCBA). Pre-booking essential.

And don't miss the performances in the Reading Room! These will run all day on both days. If you come along on Sunday at 3.30pm, you'll find me presenting a new work with the BSL poet Donna Williams. (With thanks to the Arts Council for funding this commission.)

Read an interview with Tom Sowden and Sarah Bodman about the book fair here.

Tuesday, 10 February 2015

Exhibitions in Iceland



You are invited to view two exhibitions in Siglufjörður, Iceland.  Herhusið will be open on Saturdays in March to show my recent work Vantar | Missing and Síður í Siglufjörður | Pages in Siglufjörður
a selection of artists' books on the theme of coastlines chosen by Sarah Bodman. 
Watch this space for Private View details, according to weather.

UPDATE! There's a date change: exhibition will be open on Friday 13 March, 
not Saturday 14 March. It's getting snowy here…

For directions and any other questions contact me: nancy@nancycampbell.co.uk

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)

Wednesday, 12 March 2014

Spring! New Events & Exhibitions

Preparations continue for my solo exhibition of new work in Oxford in May… meanwhile some past projects will be on show in a number of group exhibitions during the spring.


If you are in Moscow, my work can be seen in Artists’ Books in the UK and Russia in the State Historical, Architectural, Art& Landscape Museum-Reserve Tsaritsyno between 13 March and 18 May.

In Bristol, one of my first and favourite works, After Light (made in 2008 in collaboration with photographer Paula Naughton) can be seen in a celebration of the artists books collective AM Bruno in AM Bruno 2008-2014, Tom Trusky Exhibition Cases Centre forFine Print Research, between 3 March and 14 April.

In New York, my poems will be on show in The Night Hunter and Tikilluarit, two books conceived by the remarkable printer Roni Gross, exhibited at The Manhattan Fine Press Book Fair on 5 and 6 April. Look out for the Z'roah Press stand.

Taking a little bit of Denmark to Minnesota, my book Doverodde will appear in Fluxjob, an exhibition at the MCBA Star Tribune Foundation Gallery, from 7 February to 6 March. Being a great admirer of John Cage I wish I could get over to Minnesota to see the related show, Cage, on the role of musicians and composers in the Fluxus movement.

Spring has also seen a few poets emerging to read. Last Friday I had a wonderful evening reading with Grażyna Wojcieszko and Sarah Luczaj at The Albion Beatnik Bookshop in Oxford, and on Thursday 13 March I'll be reading with the fine poet Laressa Dickey (also published by MIEL editions) at Five Leaves Bookshop in Nottingham as part of the city's  States of Independence Festival.