Raleigh Rambles

John Dancy-Jones at large!

Fred Chappell, Consummate Poet and Beloved Teacher

When I left Chapel Hill for Greensboro I was determined not to be a professor/writer-wannabee and was highly suspicious and dubious of university writing programs. But UNC-G is a small campus and I was soon active and prominent as a new papermaker and nebulous Creative, though the term did not exist in 1976. I became acquainted with the renowned Fred Chappell, and though I did not become his writing student, he read what I gave him and was kind and very helpful in chats and, later, letters. What a generous soul who celebrated life in some of the richest detail to be found in verse. He wrote the story of  his life in rural Canton in poems that were like the richest bits of a short story. His actual fiction was wonderful but never became as well known. The first of his science fiction pieces was Dagon, and having read in an interview that he considered it readable in one sitting, and wrote it with that approach, I immediately did so and told him. He seemed tickled, but then Fred was always bubbling with some kind of energy. He was a learned man and intuitive teacher; he could sound out a human condition and reach out to it with an effortless good humor.

Fred drank in the late afternoons, usually with his graduate students, at the bar on Walker Street and I sometimes bicycled there and sat near them. I was starting a  new life after leaving my high school sweetheart wife and starting to write The Suicide of Hooker Van Dusen, which was dedicated to Fred and to the memory of Randall Jarrell, who preceded Fred as a great writer at UNC-Greensboro and whose wonderful poetry was sometimes tinged by a smallness of moral fortitude in living out his L.A. style life in a small town while looking out from his lectern at future schoolteachers, mostly female who, in one infamous poem, reminded him of doe-eyed cows. In huge contrast, Fred Chappell was a southern saint who embraced the beauty and power of rural life and fused his vision of it with a sophisticated and supremely expressive sensibility. He also took his teaching very seriously and gave of himself like few of his talent do. He did like a drink, and that became a hallmark of his legend. My favorite Fred Chappell memory is auditing a film class he co-taught with another UNC-G prof. It was not Fred’s turn to teach, and he was sitting in the back of the tiered lecture hall, having arrived a bit late from Walker Street. The film was Blue Angel, and the professor asked, “Why did the director pick Marlene Dietrich?.” From the upper back, Fred stands and bellows “BECAUSE SHE WAS THE MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMAN IN THE WORLD!!” Fred stopped drinking a few years after I first met him and entered his retirement years as a legendary and transformative figure in North Carolina literature. My novelette became my first published book, and its writing was permeated with the ghost of a writer gone and the warm encouragement of the one who was there. Fred wrote me a nice note about the manuscript of it, and later gave me a couple of excellent PR blurbs in comments about future projects.

I worked hard to stay in touch with Fred, and when I started publishing, he was first on my list of possibilities, and after seeing samples of my hand-laid paper broadsides, he sent me two poems. The first exists in reprinted form and is still in print. The original publication in 1983 had a second poem on the back. I am sharing Fred’s manuscript copy of that one. I am so proud of having published these, and so grateful Fred had such a long run of life and literature. He passed on January 4, 2024.

 

 

 

January 7, 2024 Posted by | literary, reflection | , , | Leave a comment

Light at the Seam – a poem by Joseph Bathanti

 

The latest publication by The Paper Plant press is this broadside of a poem by Joseph Bathanti, a former NC Poet Laureate, ASU professor of creative writing, and the author of numerous volumes of poetry. This broadside was published in conjunction with ReVIEWING 14, the Black Mountain College conference which I attend each year and for which I create handouts related to the conference. This broadside is available for $10 plus $2 shipping – you can order here.

The Black Mountain College Museum + Art Center in Asheville has become ever more dear to my heart as I have developed a retirement habit of spending time most weeks in its library as well as that of the Center for Craft and the special collections room of Pack Library. The BMCM+AC staff used a quote from me to promote the library:

Soon after the BMC museum moved to its new larger location o Pack Square, I was privileged to conduct a special workshop in the library space celebrating the value of book arts in protecting freedom of cultural expression. Participants made paper, letterpress printed a quote on it, and explored my teaching collection of books as creative objects.

My longtime fascination with Black Mountain College has been rewarded with all the ways I have been able to benefit from attending the conference, visiting the museum, and teaching and learning in association with the wonderful community I have found through my pursuits. The current show, Weaving at Black Mountain College, was co-curated by Julie Thomson, a private scholar and friend who asked me to letterpressprint a sign and some response sheets for an interactive installation in the show.

The awful flip phone picture (by me) shows the letterpress sign and also a circular paper construction that I made emulating Buckminster Fuller’s Great Circles. Alice, program director at the museum, kindly allows my labeled paper construction to reside on this library tabletop. So here is my work in the art library I love to spend time in! Hope you visit this place sometime!

Raleigh Rambles posts on BMC

My BMC page

October 12, 2023 Posted by | art, Black Mountain, literary | , , , , | Leave a comment

David Larson 2000 Calendar & Bio Pics

In 1999, David was working pretty fulltime at the Habitat Re-Store, and a stack of bright white 1 ft. square chipboard panels came in. David started designing images on them with Sharpie marker, a concentric frame of his art deco style with an interesting natural figure in the middle. After I had seen several of them, I told him if he finished 12 of them, we would publish a calendar. Everybody was going nuts over Y2K, from millennial prophecy to worldwide mainframe crashes from two missing digits, and I thought we could make something of that. The result was a monochrome calendar that sold very poorly with two exceptions: to friends at Paper Plant events and to customers at Habitat, who received a very deep discount. (and David got all the money).  Nevertheless, the calendar has become a wonderful way to save and send a nice sample of David’s work.

I remember this as a wonderful and well-attended event at our house on Person Street. Many Larson laughs heard at this event!

 

 

 

 

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My favorite feature of the project was the bio sketches that David did (or had already done) which we used to illustrate their noted birthdate in the calendar. David regularly did this kind of work, using a photo, and turned them into stickers which he shared with friends. A spread of calendar pics in followed by some of this work.

The final image is David Larson, born 12/3/55.

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Posada prep

 

Posada finalPortrait of Jose Guadalupe Posada, Mexican political illustrator who used lithography to produce his works. A favorite of David’s, using skulls and skeletons in his figures, he influenced his Day Of The Dead pieces.  Transparency and detailed image for the 2000 calendar.

 Born in 1852, Posada was able to set up his own lithography workshop and became a teacher of the craft in 1883 after his success from periodicals and newspapers publishing his works. A flood had him relocate to Mexico City in 1888 where he worked for La Patria Ilustrada, then joined a publishing firm where he created book covers, cartoons, and illustrations depicting various current events, using satire. From the beginning of the Mexican revolution in 1910 until his death in 1913, he worked tirelessly in the press honing his printmaking craft with features in the magazine El Jicote.

 

 

from David N

 

 

from Evan W

from Evan W

from Evan W

from Art D

 

from Mary R – Tolouse Lautrec

 

Sasser Street charcoal

 

from Alan Bowling, de facto executor of David’s art.

David Larson Art webpage

January 22, 2022 Posted by | art, David Larson | , , | 1 Comment

Whoso List to Hunt

Happy to announce the current publication from The Paper Plant, this broadside of a poem by Sir Thomas Wyatt. One of the very first sonnets written in English, Sir Thomas Wyatt’s poem is based on Petrarch, the Italian master who established the form. The broadside is executed on hand-laid recycled paper with 25% banana tree fiber (from my yard), letterpress printed with a stenciled monoprint. $12 ($2 shipping) order here.

 

 

September 6, 2021 Posted by | literary | , , | Leave a comment

Fish, A Broadside by Ted Pope

Ted Pope is a stalwart and beloved performer who features at the annual Black Mountain College conference held every year by the BMCM+AC on UNC-A’s campus. His presentation of his poetry is unmatched in creative delivery – from crumpling each piece after reading and tossing to the audience to lying prostrate while reading to whipping a deerskin as warm-up. The Paper Plant is proud to announce the publication of a broadside of Ted’s poem Fish. This broadside is offered in celebration of Ted’s inclusion in Appalachia Now!, the show that opens the newly renovated Asheville Art Museum.

The broadside (was) available in the museum’s gift shop and is  available for $10 plus $2 shipping: order here.

I look forward to Ted’s performance and much more at this year’s BMC conference.

September 20, 2019 Posted by | Black Mountain, literary | , , , | 1 Comment