Tag Archives: Taylor Mignon

Visual Poetry of Japan 1684-2023 edited by Taylor Mignon (Kerplunk!)

Visual Poetry of Japan 1684-2023 edited by Taylor Mignon (Kerplunk!)

In pre-modern Japan, according to Andrew Campana’s introduction to this new anthology, ‘it would have been absurd to consider poetry as something at all separate from visuality’. The first entry in the book is an ink drawing of a crow on a bare tree branch, its head tucked under its wing, accompanied by the text of a haiku by Basho. In Adam Kern’s translation the poem reads:

Upon withered bough
a crow has come to its rest…
autumn twilight

Campana provides a valuable summary of ways in which text, image, and even sound combined in traditional cultural practice. But modernist and contemporary visual poetry in Japan, he says, does not represent a ‘“return” to an older tradition’. Rather it emerges from the attempts of artists to grapple with contemporary realities, including the trauma of WWII. 

Despite the dates on the cover, the work featured in the anthology, with the exception of the Basho poem, all dates from the 20th and 21st centuries. Taylor Mignon, the editor, covers a wide array of practices in his selection. We have examples of asemic writing, calligraphy, collages, photographs of constructed objects and more. 

These kinds of practices, Campana argues, have ‘always been central to the story of poetry in Japan, but remained criminally underrepresented in collections and anthologies, both in Japanese and in translation, not fitting into the normative idea of what a “poem” is supposed to be’. The present anthology aims to set the record straight by showcasing a variety of works both by Japanese authors and by non-Japanese poets with connections to Japan.

There are many expressive pieces in the volume. ‘View From A Balcony Of An Early Summer Street’ (1925), by Hagiwara Kyōjirō, uses a diagrammatic layout and a mix of text and other visual elements to suggest a lively street scene. Yamamoto Kansuke’s ‘Buddhist Temple’s Birdcage’ of 1940 is a photo of a telephone handset inside a cylindrical birdcage, perhaps reflective of the suppression of opposition to the war by the Japanese authorities. Niikuni Seiichi’s piece ‘Rain’ from 1966, suggests a relentless downpour, and can be read as evoking the radioactively contaminated rain which followed the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. 

A section of the book is devoted to work by members of VOU, a group founded by the poet Kitasono Katué in 1935. His pioneering work in abstract and visual poetry influenced a younger generation of poets. The anthology includes work from the 1950s through to the 1970s. In 2022 Mignon published an anthology specifically about VOU with Isobar Press: VOU: Visual Poetry, Tokio, 1958–1878. The pieces included in this new anthology are by practitioners not represented in the Isobar book.

A group of Japanese book designers, all associated with visual poetry, are celebrated in another section, which draws on the collection of scholar and translator John Solt, who provides a short introduction to the work. 

Eric Selland’s asemic calligraphy in the ‘contemporary’ section is interesting, and Kunimine Teruko’s ‘Kusa (grass)’, consisting of the character for ‘grass’ in green ink, the top horizontal bar extending towards the left and right margins, has a pleasing, resonant simplicity. Adachi Tomomi’s AI generated 3D poetry is also intriguing. You can view examples of his work here.

The inclusion of non-Japanese writers is very much in the spirit of the Japanese avant garde, which from its beginnings in the 20th century sought to build international links, and which was in turn  influenced by like-minded writers and artists in the US and Europe. Campana, in the introduction, mentions the composer Toru Takemitsu. In the 1960s Takemitsu created four visual scores, including for Ring (1961). Takemitsu was conscripted into the Japanese army as a teenager and the horrors of the war left him with a deep revulsion for traditional Japanese culture. His early compositions were influenced by Western composers like Schoenberg, Webern and Stravinsky. John Cage was also an influence and it was Cage’s interest in Buddhism which eventually led Takemitsu to re-evaluate Japanese musical traditions. The composer’s visual scores don’t appear in the anthology, but they easily could have.

Visual Poetry of Japan provides a useful introduction to a range of practices which break with the idea of poetry as a block of text on a page. There are a growing number of anthologies focused on concrete and visual poetry and this volume is a commendable addition. For readers already familiar with concrete and visual poetry, the book makes available work not included in other recent anthologies.

Simon Collings 19th February 2024

VOU: Visual Poetry Tokio 1958-1978, ed Taylor Mignon (Isobar Press)

VOU: Visual Poetry Tokio 1958-1978, ed Taylor Mignon (Isobar Press)

This intriguing anthology features the work of nine visual poets active in Japan in the 1960s and 1970s, artists whose work was largely ignored by the mainstream and which, as a consequence, has been little documented. 

The VOU Club, from which the anthology takes its name, was founded by Kitasono Katue in 1935. His pioneering work in abstract and visual poetry influenced the younger generation of poets featured in the anthology. Kitasono maintained links with a wide range of writers, corresponding with Ezra Pound, James Laughlin, Kenneth Rexroth, and the Brazilian concrete poet Haroldo de Campos. He was also involved in Surrealism. 

The poems in the anthology tend to the purely abstract, making little or no use of words and letters, even as graphic elements. Where text is used the artists generally shun Japanese characters, perhaps in reaction to a tendency of Western poets to see Japanese ideograms as exotic. The techniques employed vary from photographic media, to collage, to drawing. Dada and Surrealism are obvious influences. 

There are many delightful images in the book. One of my favourites is ‘two people eating the moon’ by Tsuji Setsuko, whose work has a strong Surrealist style.  She used a camera to create her poems, photographing her own collages. She edited an avant-garde magazine O which featured the work of several of the poets included in this book.

The influence of Surrealism, in this case the paintings of Magritte, is again evident in ‘anti-illusion 2’ by Shimizu Toshihiko. He was a jazz critic who wrote the liner notes for Japanese issues of albums by Ornette Coleman and Sun Ra, and whose collages appear on the covers of albums by the Stan Tracey Sextet and the Masahiko Togashi Trio. The Japanese characters in ‘anti-illusion 2’ include fleeting references to jazz.

Another interesting image is Seki Shiro’s ‘plastic poem: parole sans parole b-2’, part of a series featuring different letters incorporated into abstract visual designs. He was associated with Tsuji Setsuko’s O before founding his own influential magazine δ.

A number of the artists included in this anthology had or have international connections and have shown and published their work in Europe, North America and elsewhere. Seki Shiro, for example has exhibited many times in Europe. Takahashi Shôhachirô, who died in 2014, also exhibited internationally, including a joint show in Los Angeles with Ian Hamilton Finlay, and exhibitions with Fluxus artists Dick Higgins and Shiomi Mieko.

VOU regularly published experimental non-Japanese artists and writers in its journal. This international orientation, suggests Eric Selland in his helpful introduction, may be one of the reasons the Japanese mainstream, preoccupied at the time with defining a new Japanese identity, marginalized these artists. Another contributing factor might be the intermedial nature of the work raising questions about whether this was ‘poetry’ or ‘visual art’. A third reason for the comparative neglect of this group perhaps lies with Western poets being more interested in Zen and haiku than in experimental poetry. 

The anthology has an interesting history which underlines how precarious is the survival of much of this material. The editor, Taylor Migon, began researching Japanese avant-garde visual poetry more than twenty years ago. His desire to put together an anthology led him to the American scholar and publisher Karl Young of Light & Dust, who proposed publishing the work online and as a CD-ROM. A limited selection of work was posted online, but the project did not progress beyond this. 

Young died in 2015 but left instructions for his executors that the planned anthology with Mignon should be published. Funds were supposedly available for this in Japan but never materialized. However, Mignon was able to recover a great deal of material he had sent Young and had feared was lost. Paul Rossiter at Isobar Press then stepped in and VOU: Visual Poetry Tokio, 1958–1978, which is dedicated to Young’s memory, is the result.

An online archive of material published by Karl Young’s Light & Dust, available here, gives a good sense of the wider context within which Japanese avant-garde art was circulating. The website includes a section on Kitasono Katue, but also features a wide array of work from different parts of the world, work by bpNichol, Michael McClure, a Fluxus section, and much more. 

VOU: Visual Poetry Tokio, 1958–1978 is a fascinating addition to a small body of publications in English which document the avant-garde tradition in Japanese poetry and its international links. Mignon provides useful contextual information in an Afterword to the book, as well as including a page of biographical data on each of the poets featured. There is also an excellent Bibliography for anyone wanting to explore further. 

Simon Collings 8th March 2022