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John Digby papers supplement
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Held at: University of Delaware Library Special Collections [Contact Us]181 South College Avenue, Newark, DE 19717-5267
This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the University of Delaware Library Special Collections. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.
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British-born poet and collagist John Digby's productive and multi-faceted career spans over five decades, beginning in the 1960s. Best known as a collage artist whose Surrealism-influenced collages have been widely exhibited in England, France, Korea, and the United States, Digby is also a prolific poet whose works have been translated into several languages. In addition, he is an accomplished illustrator, editor, publisher, and printer. His seminal publication,
The Collage Handbook, produced with Joan Digby, his wife and frequent collaborator, was the culmination of many years of research into the materials, methods, and techniques of the art of collage and the individuals past and present who practice it. The Collage Handbook (1985) remains an important and influential contribution to the development and history of this distinctive art form.John Digby was born on January 18, 1938, in London, and spent his early childhood in London during the Blitz in World War II. An avid birdwatcher, he left school at the age of fifteen to work in the Small Bird House at the London Zoo. During his six years at the zoo, Digby encountered many different species of birds and animals, gaining invaluable experience and knowledge of the natural world that later found expression in his creative work.
During his early days at the zoo, Digby was motivated to return to school after attending lectures given by Sir Julian Huxley. He registered for night classes at The Working Men's College in London and studied a variety of subjects. An English literature class introduced him, through an English translation, to the poetry of Arthur Rimbaud, which inspired Digby's first foray into writing poetry. As poetry became increasingly important to him, he left the London Zoo and spent several years working in a series of different occupations, including proofreader in a printing and publishing house, working in the Reading Room of the British Museum, and serving in various departments of civil service.
During the 1960s, Digby traveled between London and Paris in his free time as he pursued his love of poetry. In London, he became associated with a poetry circle known as "the Group," which included Edward Lucie-Smith, Philip Hobsbaum, George Macbeth, Peter Redgrove, and others, and Digby began to publish his poetry in a number of magazines. While in Paris, John Digby discovered Dada and Surrealism, which would have a profound and lasting influence on his poetry and other artistic endeavors.
The next decade was a period of tremendous activity and dramatic change in Digby's life and career, both literary and artistic. Digby co-founded a small British press, Caligula Press, with artist and illustrator Steve Wheatley. They not only published their own material, but also featured the work of such rising poets as Asa Benveniste, Jeremy Reed, Nathaniel Tarn, and others. In 1974, Anvil Press published Digby's first collection of poetry,
The Structure of Bifocal Distance, followed in 1978 by his second book of poems, Sailing Away From Night, published by Anvil Press in collaboration with Kayak, the American press of George Hitchcock based in San Francisco, California. Digby was actively involved in the cover design of both books, and at this time he began working with black and white collage, an art form that eventually emerged as his primary means of artistic expression. It was during a trip to California in the mid-1970s that George Hitchcock invited John Digby to work as an editor for Kayak, a literary magazine featuring surrealist poetry and found imagery, for which Digby also provided collage illustrations. The first one-man exhibition of Digby's collages took place in Santa Monica, California, in 1976.In 1978, John Digby emigrated to the United States, where he met his future wife, Joan Weiss, a professor of English at Long Island University and alumna of the University of Delaware (MA, English, 1965). Well known for her work with undergraduate honors education, Joan Digby is herself a respected scholar, author, editor, and poet. In addition to her scholarly contributions to eighteenth-century studies, Joan Digby has also published poems in numerous magazines and small presses. Her book of prose poems,
Sound of Feathers, was published by Red Ozier Press in 1982, and she was co-editor of three well-received poetry anthologies, all featuring illustrations by John, published by William Morrow: Permutations (1985), Food for Thought (1987), and Inspired by Drink (1988).In the decades since their marriage, John and Joan Digby have proved a dynamic and prolific team, working together on a variety of literary and artistic projects ranging from exhibitions to workshops to books. One of the most significant and influential works to emerge from this period is without doubt John and Joan Digby's
The Collage Handbook, published by Thames and Hudson in 1985. As a collagist, John Digby was interested not only in the history of collage, but also in the fundamental materials of his art—paper and paste—and methods of collage construction, with long-term conservation of these works in mind. For years, Digby consulted with rare book librarians, paper conservators, and chemists, even spending time at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., in order to explore these issues. This seminal book offers the first complete history of this distinctive art form. Using visual examples from the works of collagists past and present to explore the development of the art of collage, John and Joan Digby delve into the problems caused by various materials and suggest ways for collagists to ensure the long-term survival of their works. The Collage Handbook remains an influential and invaluable resource for collagists around the world.Since 1985, John Digby has continued to create and exhibit collages, write and publish poetry, and work closely with Joan on their many joint projects, including the establishment of two small presses at their home on Long Island. Since 1994, they have issued a variety of books and ephemera under the imprint of The Ragged Edge Press, including
Archival Collage: A Personal Example (1998), in which Digby demonstrates his archival collage techniques and materials. They later founded The Feral Press, devoted to black and white printing using ordinary archival-quality materials. Active since 2002, The Feral Press continues to publish books and ephemera written or edited by John and Joan Digby, as well as works by many different authors, with John Digby providing most of the illustrations.Biographical information derived from collection.
The John Digby papers supplement contains substantial additions to the original collection and documents Digby's prolific artistic and literary career, his wife, Joan Digby's creative and professional work, and their joint efforts as editors and contributors to their imprint, The Feral Press, which published the work of nearly 100 authors and artists from 2002-2016, and featured short works of poetry (including translations into English), short fiction, and essays from both emerging and established writers. The collection comprises forty-sixthree linear feet and nine oversize boxes of published and unpublished books, drafts, layouts and mockups, manuscripts, notes, sketches, correspondence, clippings, photographs, slides, hundreds of original collages, and a personal collection of small press poetry and artists' books. The bulk of the collection spans from the early 1970s to 2016, with some earlier outlying items (mostly pages from mid-nineteenth and early twentieth century books used as collage source materials). The vast majority of post-2002 projects found throughout the collection are publications of The Feral Press, and were designed, edited, published, and printed by John and Joan Digby. The supplement closely aligns with the original collection in providing abundant documentation for the artistic and literary career of John Digby and offers rich resources for the study of the history and development of the contemporary art of collage, Surrealist art and literature in the United States and abroad, and printing ephemera and small press publications during the second half of the twentieth century and first decade of the twenty-first century.
The collection is arranged into three subgroups: I. John Digby, II. Joan Digby, and III. The Feral Press.
Subgroup I., John Digby, parallels the original collection in its arrangement and contains published and unpublished work by the artist/poet; exhibition-related materials; collages and artwork; correspondence; personal and ephemeral items; reviews and press releases; financial appraisals of Digby's artwork, assorted publications with John Digby poetry and artwork; and other publications collected by Digby.
Subgroup II., comprises materials related to scholar, author, editor, and poet, Joan Digby. The series mirrors the arrangement of Series I., and contains Joan Digby's published and unpublished projects; materials related to her professional work as an educator; correspondence; personal and ephemeral items; assorted publications with Joan Digby essays; and reviews of Joan Digby's work.
Subgroup III., comprises materials related to and produced by The Feral Press, the primary imprint of Prehensile Pencil Publications, a small New York publishing company founded and operated by John and Joan Digby. The series contains general materials related to the press; Feral Press publications arranged by author; and Feral Press publications arranged by artist.
Materials in the collection are arranged chronologically within each topical subdivision where possible, although the materials related to some individual projects remain in the order established by Digby and are noted throughout.
Boxes 1-46: Shelved in SPEC MSS record center cartons
Boxes 47-50: Shelved in SPEC MSS oversize boxes (17 inches)
Boxes 51-53: Shelved in SPEC MSS oversize boxes (18 inches)
Boxes 54-55: Shelved in SPEC MSS oversize boxes (20 inches)
Removals: Shelved in SPEC MSS oversize mapcases
Removals: Shelved in SPEC Media Discs
Removals: Shelved in SPEC Media Videocassettes
Removals: Shelved in SPEC Audiocassettes
Purchases and gifts of Joan and John Digby, 2008-2016
Processed and encoded by Dustin Frohlich, June 2017.
People
- Digby, Joan
- Bai, Hong Ai
- Barkan, Stanley H.
- Beck, Heather McCloskey
- Dalachinsky, Steven
- Decossaux, Mary Lou
- De Pol, John, 1913-2004
- Dolis, John, 1945-
- Gerber, Nancy, 1956-
- Giannini, David
- Goodnough, Robert, 1917-2010
- Gordon, Joan, 1947-
- Guyton, Daniel
- Harter, Jim
- Jhaverī, Dilīpa, 1943-
- Leale, B. C.
- Lehtpere, Ilmar
- Levin, Dan, 1914-2015
- Lucie-Smith, Edward
- Magowan, Robin
- Masih, Tara L.
- Miller, Edmund, 1943-
- Murphy, Sadie
- Otomo, Yuko
- Pallant, Cheryl
- Pahl, Dennis
- Prado, Adélia
- Poole, Francis
- Puckett, Caleb (Caleb Stephen), 1975-
- Reed, Jeremy
- Register, Paul Brent
- Rutsala, Vern
- Sandy, Stephen
- Sant'anna, André, 1964-
- Seligman, Tina
- Slechta, Mary McLaughlin, 1956-
- Southwick, Kimberly Ann
- Tarn, Nathaniel
- Terrill, Mark
- Walther, Suzanne K. (Suzanne Klara)
- Weisslitz, E. F.
- Windham, Donald
- Wolak, Bill
Organization
- Anvil Press Poetry (London, England)
- Feral Press
- Ragged Edge Press (Oyster Bay, N.Y.)
- Stone House Press (Roslyn, N.Y.)
Subject
- Art, Modern--20th century
- Collage--20th century
- Collage--20th century--Exhibitions
- Collage--21st century
- Collage--21st century--Exhibitions
- Poets, English--20th century
- Poets, English--21st century
- Poets, American--20th century
- Poets, American--21st century
- Private presses--New York (State)--History--20th century
- Private presses--New York (State)--History--21st century
Occupation
- Publisher
- University of Delaware Library Special Collections
- Finding Aid Author
- University of Delaware Library, Special Collections
- Finding Aid Date
- 2016 October 25
- Access Restrictions
-
The collection is open for research.
- Use Restrictions
-
Use of materials from this collection beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. Permission to publish or reproduce is required from the copyright holder. Please contact Special Collections Department, University of Delaware Library, https://library.udel.edu/static/purl.php?askspec
Collection Inventory
Subgroup I., John Digby, comprises a major portion of the collection and parallels the original collection in its arrangement. The subgroup contains materials related to various Digby published and unpublished work; exhibition-related materials; collages and artwork; correspondence; personal and ephemeral items; reviews and press releases; financial appraisals of artwork, assorted publications with John Digby poetry and artwork; and other publications collected by Digby.
Series I.A., Published projects, comprises materials related to the published work of John Digby appearing between 1983 and 2016. Publications include the artist's original, found, and collage poetry and prose; his translations of ancient Chinese poetry, much of which was produced in collaboration with Hong Ai Bai via their technique of poetic "improvisation"; his published essays related to his own collage exhibitions; and lastly, anthologies edited jointly with Joan Digby. Each subseries largely consists of Feral Press publications and is arranged in chronological order by individual project. The types of materials found in this series include drafts, proofs, layouts and mockups, background research materials, notes, correspondence, reproductions of artwork, and numerous collage drafts and cutouts. The materials reflect Digby's preparatory work and iterative processes in his writing, his collage work, and his book design and layout.
Subseries I.A.1., General publications, contains materials related to Digby's original publications which largely consist of original, found, and collage poetry published by The Feral Press, but also draft and publicity materials for some earlier works concerning his collage methodology, as well as art-books strictly featuring his collages. Predominantly consisting of drafts, proofs, layouts, and notes, nearly all of these works contain small-scale specimens of original Digby collages eventually used for publication.
Drafts, proofs, and notes for Digby's Improvisations on Arthur Rimbaud's "Le Bateau ivre" (The Drunken Boat) are included in this subseries. The work is an example of John Digby's "improvisatory" method of translating poetry, a process he further explored while translating classical Chinese poems both individually and in collaboration with scholar Hong Ai Bai. A detailed description of this process is found in the following two subseries: I.A.2. Improvisations on Chinese poetry and I.A.3. In collaboration with Hong Ai Bai. Early items of significance in the first subseries include correspondence, proofs, and notes for Digby's Incantations which was published by Stone House Press in 1983; publicity materials for The Arches, (significant materials related to The Arches can be found in the original collection, MSS 0569); two copies of Archival Collage: A Personal Example which offer insights into Digby's collage methodology; a copy of Lines to a Dodo which was published by Digby's Ragged Edge Press; and a print-out of a section of the now-defunct "johndigby.com" website mainly concerning Digby's Osip Mandelstam collage series. More information on Incantations, The Arches, and Osip Mandelstam can be found in the original collection.
Folder contains items relating to John Digby's collection of poems and poetry,
Incantations, published by Stone House Press. Other materials include correspondence from press proprietor Morris Gelfand, and items relating to a print of "Thoughts on Tintern Abbey," a poem by John Digby's son, Andrew Digby, which was illustrated with a John Digby collage and also printed by Stone House Press. A framed broadside print of the father/son collaboration has been removed to oversize box 54.Book contains seventy-one collages on liberty. Published by Thames and Hudson, Inc.
Folder includes two copies of the publication as well as essay entitled, "John Digby-Collage: Targets for a Millennium." Also included are twelve slides of images used in the publication, and prints of Digby collages for
Targets exhibition.Published by Digby's Ragged Edge Press.
Printout of johndigby.com mainly concerning Digby's
Osip Mandelstam collage series.Feral Press publication with cover and collage illustrations plus "spots" by John Digby.
This folder contains photographs of related 2005 France exhibit.
Found poem with cover and three collages by John Digby. Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 47.
Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 47.
Found poem with cover and three illustrations by the author.
Found poem with cover and three collages by John Digby.
Collage poem with cover and three collage illustrations by John Digby.
Found poem with cover and illustration by John Digby.
Conceptual booklet with words and images by John Digby.
Cover and three collages by John Digby.
Short story in Cockney rhyming slang and glossary with illustrations by Luda Pahl.
Prose poem with cover and two collages by John Digby.
Collage poem with cover and two illustrations by John Digby.
Found prose with five collages by John Digby.
Collage poem copiously illustrated with collages.
Five collage poems with cover and six collages by John Digby.
Collage prose poem with illustrations by the author.
Collage prose poem with cover and three collages by the author.
Subseries I.A.2., Improvisations on Chinese poetry, contains proofs, drafts, research materials, collages, notes, and correspondence related to John Digby's solo efforts in translating and adapting ancient Chinese poetry. Digby's "improvisatory" method of translating poetry is a process he explored extensively in collaboration with scholar Hong Ai Bai (see following subseries I.A.3) but also independently.
Three projects in this subseries, "Songs from the Chinese Poets", "Pausing at the Border" and "Evening Peace" were adapted to accompany musical pieces by P. Brent Register, professor of music at Clarion University, and were printed as keepsakes to accompany various music, visual art, and dance programming.
Folder includes John Digby original photographs used in the publication.
Poet's Farthing Card trifold with four collages by John Digby.
Cover and four illustrations by Linda Vi Vona.
P. Brent Register, music. Text improvisations and collages by John Digby. Folders contain sheet music for tenor, oboe, and clarinet.
With cover and illustrations by Linda Vi Vona.
Five Chinese adaptations with illustrations by Linda Vi Vona produced as a keepsake for a program of music by P. Brent Register which was choreographed by John Ollom.
Two poems adapted from Tu Fu and Po Chu-I by John Digby, with cover and six illustrations by Linda Vi Vona.
Li Po adaptation with cover and two illustrations by Linda Vi Vona.
English adaptations of six Wang Wei poems with copious drawings by Jerimiah D. Syme (ehon book format).
Poet's Farthing Card series. Illustrated by Mary Lou Wilshaw-Watts.
Evening Peace was arranged by P. Brent Register for soprano, tenor, baritone, oboe, bassoon, and piano. Original music published by Jeanne Music, 2014.
Subseries I.A.3., In collaboration with Hong Ai Bai, documents John Digby's partnership with linguistic scholar and English professor Hong Ai Bai in the poetic translation of classical Chinese poetry using their "improvisatory" method. From roughly 2010-2016, the pair produced over twenty Feral Press publications utilizing this technique that moved away from literal translation of ancient text and instead adapted poetry using a threefold process of "imitation, imagination, and modernization." "Imitation" involved recreating the literal words, meaning, and structure of the poems, while "Imagination" contextualized the work through analysis of the author's life and culture. "Modernization," in turn, contemporized the language of the work and sought to produce a "living-poem," that might have been written in present-day America.
The subseries includes proofs, drafts and layouts, collages, research materials, notes, publicity materials and ephemera related to the publications, all of which were published by The Feral Press. The Tang-era and later classical poetry selected by the collaborators for adaptation largely centered on topics of gender (primarily in regard to the life of women during the Tang dynasty); horses; tea; birds; the moon; and the Chinese "Cold-Food Festival."
The subseries also contains two essays by Hong Ai Bai further explaining the idea of improvisatory translation: "Chinese Poems: Untranslatable? Then Let's Improvise," and "Improvising Chinese Classical Poems to Contemporary English Readers." Also included is John Digby's essay, "Coming to Chinese Poetry," in which he explains his own relationship to the poems.
Along with copious research about Chinese poetry in the form of web printouts and notes, the subseries also contains research, notes, and improvisations associated with individual Chinese poets, arranged by author name.
Improvisation from Tu Fu with introduction and notes by Hong Ai Bai.
Essay on the biographical links between three Tang poets and the women's lives they describe in "Chant of the Departing Wife" (Li Bai), "An Isolated Lady" (Du Fu), and "A Wife's Sorrow" (Bai Juyi). English improvisations of these poems and illustrations by John Digby; Chinese texts included.
Poem and appreciation by John Digby and Hong Ai Bai.
Poem and appreciation by John Digby and Hong Ai Bai.
Improvisations and commentary for poems set to music by P. Brent Register which were performed at the National Collegiate Honors Council conference in Phoenix, Arizona, 2011.
Text improvisations by John Digby. Interpretive commentaries by Hong Ai Bai. Music by P. Brent Register for soprano, flute/alto flute, piano.
Improvisation and automatic ink drawings by John Digby. Prose appreciation by Hong Ai Bai.
Folded sheet, poem, and commentary.
Poem and commentary.
Poem and commentary.
Poem and commentary.
Poem and commentary.
Poem and commentary.
Improvisations on six horse poems attributed to Li Shimin who ruled as Tang emperor Taizong (626-649) poems and commentary.
Illustrated essay with improvisations on Chinese poems related to horses. Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 47.
Poem and commentary.
Poems and commentary related to major Chinese festival.
Twenty five later poems by the author with commentary and illustrations.
Poems and commentary
Poem and commentary.
Mis-assembled copy, signed by Hong Ai Bai and John Digby.
Printed as a keepsake for Hutton House lectures.
Printed as a keepsake for Hutton House lectures. Anthology of classical Chinese and English poems.
English translations of classical Chinese poetry.
Subseries I.A.4., Essays related to collage exhibitions, contains booklets and their associated draft materials produced by Digby via The Feral Press as keepsakes for seven separate collage exhibitions: Concerning the Angels: Homage to Raphael Alberti; Cutting Hedges; Mythical Manuscripts Collages; Vignettes; Songs of the Sirens; Spirits of the Pinnacles; and Another Place, Another Time, Another World: Homage to Robert Hooke. In these essays, Digby explained some of his approaches to collage, revealing the influences and inspirations he found in poetry, book culture, the natural world, and elsewhere. The subseries contains drafts, layouts and mockups, notes, collages, exhibit ephemera, and correspondence. Items of note in this subseries include "The Boomerangs," collages that were produced in conjunction with the 2005-2006 Spirits of the Pinnacles exhibition inspired by "curious rock formations on the western coast of Australia." The boomerang-shaped collages, twelve original and thirty-one photocopied reproductions, are examples of Digby's "intaglio collage" style, a technique of inlaying paper fragments to create the effect of a paper mosaic. The subseries also contains four framed collages from the Pinnacles exhibition, as well as four others, also framed, from the Homage to Robert Hooke exhibition. For further information about John Digby's collage exhibitions, see series I.C., Exhibitions.
Essay and poem with three collages by John Digby. Back cover photo by Joan Digby. Four framed collages have been removed to oversize box 55.
In addition to other materials, this folder includes "The Boomerangs," collages that were produced in conjunction with the 2005-2006 Spirits of the Pinnacles exhibition inspired by "curious rock formations on the western coast of Australia." The boomerang-shaped collages, twelve original and thirty-one photocopied reproductions, are examples of Digby's "intaglio collage" style, a technique of inlaying paper fragments to create the effect of a paper mosaic. "The Boomerangs" collages have been removed to oversize box 51.
Folder primarily consists of correspondence about project.
Keepsake for Pavel Zoubok Gallery Exhibition. Four framed collages have been removed to oversize box 50.
Subseries I.A.5., Anthologies edited by John and Joan Digby, contains materials related to three Feral Press publications compiled jointly by the Digbys:
Water Voyages (2002), Dancing to the Music of Poetry (2004) and Bird Collages (2007, 2008). The first, Water Voyages, was produced as seventeen pamphlets of seagoing and maritime poetry illustrated with collages by John Digby. The subseries includes the complete run of Water Voyages booklets as well as an index, a note on the keepsakes, and an essay, "The Maritime Collages of John Digby," by naval historian William Dudley. Also included are proof copies and correspondence related to the anthology.Dancing to the Music of Poetry is the most extensive project in the subseries and consists of twenty-one pamphlets of diverse poetry about music with collages and illustrations by John Digby. The subseries contains the full run of the pamphlets as well as associated mockup and layout materials, proofs, research materials, notes, and ephemera. Notable author permissions correspondence includes poets Philip Levine, John Heath-Stubbs, Patricia Goedicke, and Thomas M. Disch. Numerous collage source materials are found with the project, including piano charts from the 1927 Shefte's Rapid Course in Modern Piano Playing. The subseries also contains some promotional flyers and other ephemera related to the debut of the project on July 18, 2004 at the Walt Whitman Birthplace Museum, an event that included choreographic dancing by Hyun-Ok Kim. Additionally, the subseries contains numerous photocopies of music-related short stories and prose pieces the Digbys gathered for a music-themed anthology that predated Dancing, but was never compiled. The subseries also contains a small amount of materials related to the Digbys's Bird Collages anthology including two folders of original collages for the project.
Seventeen pamphlets of diverse poetry illustrated with collages by John Digby. Folders include complete series as well as index, a note on the keepsakes, and essay "The Maritime Collages of John Digby," by William Dudley, Ph.D., director of naval history at the Naval Historical Center.
Twenty-one pamphlets of diverse poetry illustrated with collages by John Digby. Illustrations by John Digby and layout and design by Joan Digby.
Notable author correspondence in this folder includes letters from Phillip Levine, John Heath-Stubbs, Patricia Goedicke, and Tom Disch.
Includes
Shefte's Rapid Course in Modern Piano Playing by Art Shefte, 1927.Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 49.
John and Joan Digby had gathered Xerox photocopies of short stories and prose pieces about music for a music anthology prior to their compiling
Dancing to the Music of Poetry. These folders contain photocopies demonstrating their first efforts. The date of these are unknown. This folder includes correspondence with publisher W.W. Norton & Co., proposing the music-writing anthology, "Words in Harmony," which may have been an early title for the project.Produced for the Zoological Society of London.
Subseries I.B., Unpublished Projects contains materials related to various unfinished and unpublished Digby projects ranging in date from roughly 1980 to 2014. The subseries is arranged chronologically and contains drafts of short stories, poetry and collage poetry manuscripts, book proposals, layouts and mockups of various work, surrealist broadsides, and unidentified translations. Most of the projects in this subseries consist mainly of notes and drafts, and some have not progressed beyond the preliminary planning stage. Included is a proposal and preliminary collage materials for a comic book featuring Leonardo Da Vinci and Mona Lisa as characters; notes and research for an unpublished anthology collaboration with Egyptologist Bob Brier about "the mummy in literature"; a proposal for another collaboration with author Cecil Helman; and an unfinished John Digby novel, set in Australia. Another particular project of note is John and Joan Digby's "Curators on Collage," an unpublished anthology related to the study of black-and-white collage. Folders contain the project proposal, research materials, and correspondence between the Digbys and other artists about black-and-white collage.
Folder includes drafts of the unpublished project.
Materials relating to an unpublished Digby collaboration with Egyptologist Bob Brier about "the mummy in literature."
This folder includes pages cut from
The Boy's Own Paper, 1884 and unknown publication, 1885.This folder contains original collages.
Manuscript of short story.
Proposal for oral history and collage project about daily life in Oyster Bay, Long Island, New York.
Manuscript of short story.
Manuscript and typescript drafts for untitled fiction novel set in Australia.
Series I.C., Exhibitions, contains exhibition cards, invitations, posters, flyers, collages, correspondence with galleries, photographs, publicity materials, and ephemera for John Digby exhibitions, talks, showcases, and workshops. Detailed descriptions by Digby, written for use in publicity or as keepsakes, are included for several of the exhibitions.
Held at Sea Cliff Photograph Company, Sea Cliff, New York.
Held at Kellengberg Gallery, Molloy College, Rockville Centre, New York.
Folder includes prints of "Mythical Manuscripts Collages," as well as poems related to the collages. Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 48.
Includes a summary of John Digby's exhibitions until 2008 as well as general exhibition correspondence and venue lists.
Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 51.
An original dance and theatre piece inspired by the collages of John Digby.
Exhibited at United States Merchant Marine Museum, Kings Point, 2002; Calvert Marine Museum, Solomons, Maryland, 2002; and Craven Gallery, Martha's Vineyard, 2002.
Folder includes proposals to various marine museums for "Water Voyages" exhibitions. Additional materials related to "The Moon as Text," as well as price lists of artwork are also included.
Exhibited at Pavel Zoubok Gallery.
Exhibited at Oyster Bay/East Norwich Library and Blocklyn Books.
Exhibited at Hammond Museum, August-October, 2004.
Exhibited at Hempstead House, Sands Point, New York
Exhibited at Islip Art Museum, June 29-September 11, 2005.
Exhibited at Long Beach Public Library, Long Beach, New York.
Exhibited at Carol Craven Gallery.
Exhibited at Gallery Shilla, Deagu, South Korea, 2006.
Held at Nassau Community College.
Exhibited at Pavel Zoubok Gallery.
Exhibited with original choreography at National Collegiate Honors Council conference, Denver, Colorado.
Held at C.W. Post campus, Long Island University.
Held at Hutchins Gallery at LIU Post.
Exhibition included collage of Digby's entitled "City Life."
Exhibited in Viljandi, Estonia from May-June, 2016 at Kondas Keskus, which is devoted to self-taught artists. The exhibition was accompanied by a booklet of Chinese moon poems, translated into English by Hong Ai Bai and John Digby and into Estonian by Mathura Lattik.
Posters removed to oversize mapcases.
Series I.D., Collages and artwork, contains John Digby's original collages, photocopied reproductions of collages, collage source materials, and other paper-cut and hand-drawn artwork. Noteworthy items in this series include a print of a Digby collage created for Stone House Press accompanying a Robert Bly poem which is signed by the poet. Included are matted and framed works, as well as small-scale, "loose" collages unidentified with any collage series. Source materials for Digby collages contain some of the oldest items in collection including torn pages from The Illustrated News of the World (1892), the German Uber Land Und Meer (1900) as well as pages from other unknown books circa 1900. The subseries also contains Digby artwork in other mediums including original paper-cuts (published as illustrations in Gourmet Magazine, date unknown), drawings for the artist's "Punch and Judy" series, two collage journals, and three drawing pads.
Print signed by Robert Bly. Proof and print have been removed to oversize box 52.
Folder includes "Cross-Reference This!" collage by created by Digby for the NCHC Publications Board." Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize boxes 47 and 54, and oversize mapcases.
Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 47.
Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 48.
Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 52.
items removed to oversize box 52.
items removed to oversize box 52.
Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 51.
Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 48.
Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 51.
Originally published as illustrations in Gourmet Magazine.
items removed to oversize box 54.
Series I.E., Correspondence, is divided into two files, the first containing general correspondence between the Digbys and their wide circle of friends and colleagues, arranged chronologically from 1984-2016. The second file contains correspondence from individuals with whom the Digbys communicated repeatedly and is arranged alphabetically by correspondent, then chronologically by year.
This folder contains an original linocut holiday print by James Wyatt Hendricks.
Folder includes three wood cuts printed by Stone House Press for a Goudy Society keepsake.
Rolodex removed to oversize box 53.
Series I.F., Personal and ephemera contains various personal items of John Digby, some notable, including his wedding announcement to Joan Digby as well as a poem by South African Beat poet Sinclair Beiles addressed to John Digby. Other items include John DePol engravings and ephemera, as well as some awards Digby received. Ephemeral items include copious exhibition cards for various (non-Digby) exhibits.
item removed to oversize box 54.
Series I.G., Reviews and press releases, contains various clippings, newspapers, and magazines with articles publicizing and reviewing Digby artwork from 1979-2014. The folders also contain several press releases by Digby.
C.W. Post newspaper containing review of Digby's work and publicizing upcoming exhibition at Hutchins Gallery, C.W. Post library.
Press for Digby exhibit at Sea Cliff Library.
December 1984 issue contains article, "John Digby," by Joan Hildreth Weiss (Digby). Folder also contains Summer 1984 issue of
Arts Magazine (contains no Digby-related material).Three newspapers in Korean containing articles about John and Joan Digby.
Contains article about John Digby. item removed to oversize box 52.
"John Digby's Rainbow of Butterflies Alights in Martha's Vineyard," essay by Tina Seligman in October 2005 issue. Folder also includes April and Summer 2005 issues, containing no Digby-related material, but with articles by Seligman.
Series I.H., Financial, contains price lists and account books related to the appraisal and sale of John Digby artwork from 1977 to 1995.
Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 52.
Series I.I., Assorted publications with John Digby works, contains periodicals and a small number of other publications that contain John Digby essays, poetry, and artwork from 1973-2016. Included is a nearly complete run of "Magazine.Art," magazines from 2000-2006 that contain numerous John Digby collages and poems (as well as many Joan Digby essays). Other highlights include multiple issues of
Blades, a magazine of experimental writing and art, created by poet Francis Poole, as well as four issues of Kayak, a literary magazine featuring surrealist poetry and found imagery.With essay on Courtright by John and Joan Digby.
Folder contains numbers 34 (December 2000), 36 (Fall 2002), 38 (Summer 2004), 40 (Summer/Fall 2005), 41 (Spring/Summer 2006), 42 (Fall 2006 - Winter 2007)
Folder contains numbers 44 (Winter 2008), 45 (Fall/Winter 2008), 46 (Summer 2009), 48 (Spring/Summer 2010), 49 (Winter/Spring 2011), 50 (Fall/Winter 2011-2012)
Numbers 44 (1982) and 58 (1983)
Folder contains numbers 31 and 33
Folder contains numbers 43, 49, 51.
Folder contains numbers 51, 52, 54.
Folder contains numbers 57, 58, 60.
Folder contains numbers 61, 64.
A publication of New York Dance & Arts Innovations Inc. (NYDAI), a not-for-profit organization established with the aim of multi-national creative support and promotion of the performing, visual and literary arts. Edited by Suzanne K. Walther (also a Feral Press author).
"Improvisations of Rimbaud's
The Drunken Boat" by John Digby. "Starting at Uluru," essay by Joan Digby."Opposites Attract at the Metropolitan Museum" essay by Joan Digby. "After Li Po," poem by John Digby.
"New York: Cut and Paste," essay by Joan Digby. "Farewell to Sushi," poem by Joan Digby. "Caterpillar on Hardtru," poem by Joan Digby. "A Brief Description of Found Poetry," essay by John Digby that includes found poems, "Asbestos-Packed Cocks," and "A Sad Case of...!" by John Digby.
"John Digby - Collaging Space and Time" by Tina Seligman. Poetry by Joan Digby. "Gershwin Way," essay by Joan Digby.
"The Devil's Mantle," a found poem by John Digby. "Spring Shower," a poem by Joan Digby. "Poe Street," an essay by Joan Digby. Contains laid-in materials related to Digby's work on the found poem.
"A Note on T'ao Ch'ien" poem by John Digby. "Five Sons: Fruits from the Old Tree," poem by John Digby. "A Bone," by Joan Digby. "Street Signs- Richard Tucker," essay by Joan Digby.
"An Artist in the Primeval Garden: The Recent Sculptures of Bob Goodnough," essay by Joan Digby based on a studio visit and interview with Joan and John Digby. "The Mongol's Prayer to the Spirit of All Horses," poem by John Digby. "Street Signs - Duke Ellington Boulevard," essay by Joan Digby.
"Carbohydrate Vincit Omnia; Summer in New York," poem by Joan Digby. "Spell of a Discontented Wife," poem by John Digby. "Street Signs - Charlie Parker Place," essay by Joan Digby.
"Lady Chen's Carp," short story by John Digby. "Greek Revival," poem by Joan Digby. "Here's Some Good News," poem by John Digby. "Street Signs - Lee Strasberg Way," essay by Joan Digby.
"Swedenborg at the Laundromat" short story by John Digby. "Himalays in Chelsea: The Rubin Museum of Art," essay by Joan Digby. "Collage in the Public and Spiritual Domains: The Art of Jim Harter," essay by John and Joan Digby. "Flickering in Darkness: The Prehistoric Cave Paintings in France," essay by Joan Digby. "Street Signs - Nat King Cole Walk," essay by Joan Digby.
"Dr. Knowitall's Anti-Depression Kit," short story by John Digby. "A collage poem from
Picturesque America, 1872," poem by John Digby. "The Old Goat: Ruminations on Rauschenberg's Combines," poem by Joan Digby. "Twenty-Third Street," by Joan Digby.Contains John Digby collages
Series I.J., Other publications collected by Digby, contains books, pamphlets and magazines the artist collected on various topics related to his collage work. Many of these publications have been removed for cataloging in the print collections of Special Collections. A keyword search "From the Library of John Digby" will retrieve these items from the library's catalog. items that remain in the manuscript collection are magazines featuring experimental poetry and artwork and also several ephemeral periodicals and catalogs aligned with topics found in Digby's collage work including birds and animal life, the philosopher Robert Hooke, and the Statue of Liberty.
A quarterly of poems, short stories, drawings, and criticism.
Essay on philosopher Robert Hooke (1635-1703). See also subseries I.A.4. Essays related to collage exhibitions--
Another Place, Another Time, Another World: Homage to Robert Hooke.Folder contains VIII Number 4 (1958 April) and XXVIII Number 3 (1978 March)
Folder contains Summer 2002, Winter 2002-2003, Spring 2005, Spring 2006, and Spring 2008 editions. Folder also contains promotional materials for the Society.
Folder contains Autumn 2008, Autumn 2010, and Summer 2012 editions.
Contains Andrew Digby poems.
Folder contains number 6/7 and number 11/12
Folder contains numbers 14, 15, and 16.
Subgroup II., comprises materials related to scholar, author, editor, and poet, Joan Digby. The series mirrors the arrangement of series I., and contains Joan Digby's published and unpublished projects; materials related to her professional work as an educator; correspondence; personal and ephemeral items; assorted publications with Joan Digby essays; and reviews of Joan Digby's work.
Series II.A., Published projects, contains materials related to various Joan Digby's publications which largely consist of poetry, prose, and essays published by The Feral Press from 2002-2016. The series includes proofs, layouts and mockups, typescript and manuscript drafts, notes, photographs, collage materials, and ephemera relating to the works. In addition to art by Sandra Jackman, Tina Seligman, and Molly Eckleberry, many of the works were illustrated with Joan Digby's original photography and/or John Digby collages. The series also contains a few scholarly and creative works of Joan Digby's that predate the Feral Press publications. Noteworthy items in the series include, "An Artist in the Primeval Garden," Joan Digby's essay on the art of American abstract painter and sculptor Bob Goodnough, which she based on a studio visit and interview with the artist. Photographs of artist's work, reference and research materials, notes, drafts, Goodnough exhibit ephemera, and a small amount of Goodnough correspondence are included in these folders. The essay was published in Magazine.Art, a publication of New York Dance & Arts Innovations, Inc., in the Winter-Spring 2004 issue. The series includes a significant amount of drafts, proofs, research materials, and notes for
Birds: A Flight of Poems, a poetry anthology edited by Joan Digby with collages by John Digby. The poetry selected by Digby for the compilation ranges in style, geography, and era, and embraces the poets' widespread fascination with birds through the ages and throughout the world. The anthology evolved from a shorter collection edited by Hong Ai Bai and John Digby for a Hutton House Lecture series at Long Island University based on their improvisational translations of classical Chinese poetry from the seventh through the seventeenth centuries.Written by Joan Hildreth Owen (Digby) and published in the
Bulletin of the New York Public Library, 1978.Illustrated by John Digby.
Published by the Digbys' Ragged Edge Press.
Printed as a keepsake for the Russian American-Cultural Center exhibition
Skyline Remembered: Skyline Sought works by John Digby and Mark Khidekel, September 10- October 8, 2002. Cover drawing by John Digby.Cover drawing by John Digby.
Thirteen poems with cover and four photographs from family archive.
Fourteen poems with cover and six photographs by the author and two spot illustrations by John Digby. Published in 2005 and revised in 2007.
Poem with cover by John Digby.
Eleven poems. (First edition published 2002, Second edition published 2006)
Poem with cover by John Digby.
Poem with cover photo by the author.
Ten poems with photos by the author.
Poet's Farthing Card poem by Joan Digby with cover illustration by Sandra Jackman.
Poem with three photographs by Joan Digby.
Non-fiction story with photographs by the author.
Five New York poems illustrated with photography by the author.
Five haiku translated by Joan Digby and illustrated by Tina Seligman.
Story about a horse illustrated by Molly Eckleberry.
Poetry anthology edited by Joan Digby with collages by John Digby.
Folder contains bound copy of work.
Series II.B., Unpublished projects, predominantly contains Joan Digby's original poetry typescripts and manuscripts submitted to various publications from 2002-2005. Publisher correspondence and ephemera accompanies several of the poems. The series also contains a small amount of Joan Digby critical essays for which publication information is unidentified.
Series II.C., Professional, comprises materials found in the collection related to Joan Digby's professional work as an academic, an editor, and a leader in collegiate honors programming. The series includes general materials relating to her professional life as an English professor at C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University (LIU Post) that include student newspapers, ephemera, and pamphlets for campus events. The series also contains typescripts various fiction work reviewed and edited by Digby including the historical non-fiction work, Dear Helen: Wartime Letters from a Londoner to her American pen pal, (edited by Russell M. Jones and John H. Swanson), which she reviewed for University of Missouri Press. Joan Digby was a longtime director of the Honors program at LIU Post, and served as president of the National Collegiate Honors Council (NCHC), whose mission is to "support and enhance "the community of educational institutions, professionals, and students who participate in collegiate honors education around the world." The series includes several NCHC reports and ephemeral items, but also contains an extensive typescript with edits for
Partners in the Parks: Field Guide to an Experiential Program in the National Parks, a NCHC monograph that Digby edited. The publication provides details of the organization's commitment to educating and engaging students through hands-on learning in the stewardship of National Parks.Includes original photographs and press release by Joan Digby.
T-shirts featuring John Digby collages created for NCHC 2008 conference have been removed to oversize box 53.
series II.D. Correspondence contains a small amount of Joan Digby correspondence from 1987-1992. On item of note in this subseries is a grass-and-paper original collage gift sent to Joan Digby by Tina Seligman. Many letters to the Digbys in the collection were addressed to both John and Joan Digby, therefore additional Joan Digby correspondence can be found in series I.E., John Digby Correspondence.
Letters in this folder are from unknown "Bobby" to Joan Digby.
Includes grass-and-paper original collage gift sent to Joan Digby by Tina Seligman.
series II.E. contains a small amount of clippings, flyers, and other ephemera related to Joan Digby.
series II.F. contains assorted publications with various Joan Digby critical essays and poems including
Arts Magazine, Magazine.Art, and Cross-Cultural Communications Bilingual Broadsides. For additional Joan Digby poetry in published in magazines, see series I.I.—Assorted publications with John Digby works -- Magazine.Art.Contains essay, "Cast of Characters: Robert Courtright's Masks" by Joan and John Digby.
Contains essay, "John Digby," by Joan Hildreth Weiss [Digby].
Contains essay, "Ellery Kurtz," by Joan Hildreth Weiss [Digby].
Poems by Joan Digby.
Contains essay, "Tito Puente Way," by Joan Digby, along with other work by John and Joan Digby. Folder also includes ephemera related to "Tito Puente's" restaurant, the subject of Joan Digby's article.
Publication of C.W. Post, Long Island University. Volumes 3 (1975), 5 (1977), and 6 (1978).
Publication of C.W. Post, Long Island University. Volumes 8 (1982) and 10 (1988).
series II.G. contains reviews of Joan Digby work that includes a review of Permutations, A Book of Poetry and Essays, by Dr. Joan Digby and Professor Bob Brier.
Subgroup III., The Feral Press comprises materials related to and produced by The Feral Press, the primary imprint of Prehensile Pencil Publications, a small Long Island, New York, publishing company founded and operated by John and Joan Digby. The Feral Press published the work of nearly 100 authors and artists from 2002-2016, and featured short works of poetry (including translations into English), short fiction, and essays from both emerging and established writers. Feral Press booklets were produced strictly in black-and-white and maintained a uniform aesthetic while at the same time showcasing a variety of media. These included pencil and ink drawing, collage, engravings, charcoal, and photography. Feral Press artists were encouraged to approach the literary texts as "interpreters" and "improvisers," to create artwork inspired by and uniquely suited to the source material. John Digby's collage art comprises the bulk of the artwork found in the Feral Press series, and hundreds of his small, intricate collage specimens can be found throughout, each uniquely crafted to suit individual Feral Press authors' literary text. Joan Digby contributed photography as a Feral Press artist, and her original work is noted throughout the series. The Poet's Farthing Card is the secondary imprint of Prehensile Pencil Publications and published single poems paired with an illustration. These small cards are also printed strictly in black-and-white in accordance with the same organizational aesthetic as The Feral Press and utilizing Feral Press artists. Poet's Farthing Cards are noted throughout the series. The series contains general materials related to the press; Feral Press publications arranged by author; and Feral Press publications arranged by artist.
Series III.A., Feral Press general, contains a small amount of printed material created for promotional purposes and not associated with any author, as well as some ephemeral items that mention the Feral Press in publication.
Series III.B., Feral Press authors contains proofs, drafts, research materials, original artwork, and correspondence related to hundreds of Feral Press publications. The series is arranged alphabetically by author, and then chronologically by the publication year of his or her work. Biographical information for the majority the authors in this series can be found on the Prehensile Pencil Publications website: http://pp-pub.com/authors.
Translated from Turkish by Nihal Yeginobali. Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 48.
Ten poems with cover and twelve collages by John Digby.
"Five poems by Bergès Alvarez with cover and six illustrations by Linda Vi Vona."
Poem with five photographs by John and Joan Digby.
Single poem with two illustrations by John Digby.
Five poems with four collage illustrations by John Digby.
Three poems with three photographs by Joan Digby.
Bound 2013 edition, signed by Barkan.
Eight poems in English translated into Chinese by Hong Ai Bai.
"Eight poems illustrated with found images with photos by Bebe Barkan and collages by John Digby."
Thirty-six pages, illustrated by Bebe Barkan.
Folder contains prints of additional haikus by Barkan, circa 1976.
Compilation of Sicilian poetry edited by Barkan and Saverio A. Scammacca.
A modern view of biblical events with three of the author's black and white illustrations.
Story with cover and two illustrations by the author
Story with cover and several illustrations by the author.
This folder contains original artwork by Elliot Howard Bassman.
Collage type cover and illustration by John Digby.
Thirteen poems with cover and twelve stipple drawings by Mary Lou Wilshaw-Watts.
Illustrated by John Digby.
Short story illustrated by the author.
A meditation on writing with cover and eleven collages by John Digby.
Reflective notes on the nature of cleaning and women's lives. Cover and eleven collages by John Digby.
Poetry with collages by Joan Harrison.
Translated into English, edited, and illustrated by Joan Harrison.
Collages by John Digby.
Poem with cover and title page illustrations by Bebe Barkan.
Illustrations by Luda Pahl.
Collages by John Digby.
Cioffi short story manuscript
Cioffi short story manuscript
Prose poem with illustrations after Goya
Poems and collages by Dalachinsky.
Ten poems with cover and illustration by John Digby
Short story with cover by Luda Pahl.
Short story with cover photo by Joan Digby.
Short story with cover photo by Joan Digby.
Fourteen poems with sixteen collages by John Digby. Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 48.
Based on the microscopy work of eighteenth-century scientist, Robert Hooke. Illustrated with collage by John Digby.
Illustrated with collages by John Digby.
Poet's Farthing Card with two photographs by John Digby.
Drawings by Linda Vi Vona.
Nine poems with a cover and illustration by John Digby and three drawings by Yvonne Youst.
Poem with collages by John Digby.
Two poems with collages by John Digby.
Two poems illustrated by Joan Harrison.
Ten poems illustrated by John Digby.
Folder also contains copy of
Double Helix: A Love Story in Poetry by Barry Fruchter and Amber Rose. Also included are John Digby collages and cut-outs for Fruchter's work.Memoir of her mother's struggle with Alzheimer's illustrated with photography by Joan and John Digby.
Aphoristics with photographs by John Digby.
Four prose poems with collages by John Digby.
Prose poem with drawings by Linda Vi Vona.
Nine prose poems with ten drawings by Judith Strauss Koppel.
Eight prose poems with ten photographs by Joan Digby.
Seven poems with six drawings and cover by Judith Strauss Koppel.
Five prose poems with etchings and woodblocks by Lorraine Klagsbrun.
Prose poems with collages by John Digby.
Two poems with collages by John Digby.
Eleven prose poems with cover and seven collages by John Digby.
Seven poems with nine colleges by John Digby.
Short story with cover and illustration by the author.
A play in poetry with cover and four photograph's of the author's sculpture by Joan Digby. Folder also contains various Goodnough ephemera.
A play in poetry with cover and four photograph's of the author's sculpture by Joan Digby.
Memoir of student years with cover and three illustrations by the author.
Scholarly essay with cover and ten collage illustrations by John Digby.
Four pattern poems
Collaborative found poem with collage illustrations. Both Digby and Harrison composed collages and then traded them, inviting the other artist to add to the work.
This title remains unpublished by The Feral Press.
Memoir and critique of a collagist known to the author. Illustrated with six of Satty's collages.
Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 48.
Number one in The Feral Press Korean Culture series. Cover by John Digby.
Number two in The Feral Press Korean Culture series. Cover by John Digby.
Number three in The Feral Press Korean Culture series. Cover by John Digby.
Number four in The Feral Press Korean Culture series. Cover by John Digby.
"The Towertop Room in My Mind," by Sang-Woo Park.
"Manpasikjeok Flute," unknown author.
"The Waiting Rock," unknown author.
"The King Who Was Hatched From an Egg," unknown author.
Fifteen poems with fifteen collages by John Digby.
Fifteen poems with fifteen collages by John Digby.
Poet's Farthing Card proofs for the poem. Drawings by Linda Vi Vona
Published by The Press of the Third Mind, Chicago.
Poem with cover and five collages by John Digby
Poet's Farthing Card with collage by John Digby.
Classical epic poem of Estonia in three booklets.
Folder includes reproductions of collages by John Digby.
Poem with a cover illustration by John Digby and two spot illustrations from archive materials.
Story with cover and one illustration by Elliott Bassman.
Story with cover and one illustration by John Digby.
Published by North Sea Poetry Scene Press.
In collaboration with the LIU Post Department of English. Ed. Forrest Levin, with illustrations by Kathleen Levin
Cover and copious illustrations by John Digby. Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 48.
Children's story with cover and eight illustrations by Luda Pahl.
Prose poems with cover and seven illustrations by John Digby.
An adaptation from Carlos Drummond de Andrade, with cover and two illustrations by Adrian Poole.
Cover and six illustrations by Luda Pahl.
With cover and five illustrations by Mikhail Gubin.
Pasedeloup Press, Stratford.
Pasedeloup Press, Stratford.
University of South Carolina Press.
Published by Bessarion Publications, Scotland. Additional poems included in folder.
Single poem with two cover illustrations by John Digby and title photograph of Rimbaud's window by Joan Digby.
This folder also contains typescript copies of additional Magowan poems (publication information unknown).
Poem with cover and ten illustrations by John Digby.
Poem with cover and seven collages by John Digby.
Prose poems with cover and two collages by John Digby.
Poem with cover and seven collages by John Digby.
Three prose poems with cover, title and three collages by John Digby.
Short story with cover and three photographs by Joan Digby.
Short story with cover and two photographs by Joan Digby.
Prose poem with two illustrations by Sandra Jackman.
Poet's Farthing Card prose poem with two illustrations by Sandra Jackman.
Poet's Farthing Card prose poem with two illustrations by Mary Lou Wilshaw-Watt.
Seven poems with cover and two illustrations by Elliot Howard Bassman.
Six poems with illustrations from World War II archives.
Four poems with cover and two illustrations by John Digby.
Critical essay with cover and six collage illustrations by John Digby.
Thirty-six poems with cover and thirty-two collage illustrations by John Digby.
Nine poems with cover and ten collages by John Digby.
Nine poems with cover and six photographs by Linda Vi Vona.
Six poems with cover and six photographs by Joan Digby.
Nine poems with cover and nine collages by John Digby.
Illustrations by John Digby.
Four poems with collages by John Digby. Folder contains John Digby's original collage for book cover.
Four poems with collages by Luda Pahl.
Memoir of the author's years of rescuing and caring for Scottish Highland cattle. Illustrated with photos.
Two prose poems with cover and five illustrations by Anna Nelson.
Ten poems with collages by John Digby.
Fifteen cartoons.
Short story with cover and illustrations by Luda Pahl.
Short story with cover and illustrations by Luda Pahl.
Short story with cover and five illustrations by Luda Pahl.
Four stories with cover and six illustrations by Luda Pahl.
Six stories with cover and seven illustrations by Luda Pahl.
Essay with three illustrations is a catalog for an exhibition by the artist.
Short story with cover and two illustrations.
Poem with two photographs by Joan Digby.
Collage poem with cover and two collage illustrations by John Digby.
Poem with collage by John Digby.
Five collages John Digby.
Prose poem with cover and two collages by John Digby.
Poem with cover and two collages by John Digby.
Poem with cover and two collages by John Digby.
Poem with cover and three illustrations by John Digby.
Poems with drawings by Adrian Poole.
Cover and six illustrations by John Digby.
Poem with cover and two illustrations by John Digby.
Cover and five illustrations by John Digby.
Poem with cover and two illustrations by John Digby.
Collage poem with cover and two illustrations by John Digby.
Prose poem with thirty-two collage illustrations by John Digby.
Poem with cover and illustration by John Digby.
Poem with cover and title illustration by John Digby.
Poem with collages by John Digby.
Prose poem with cover and three illustrations by John Digby.
Two prose poems with cover and five illustrations by John Digby.
Two prose poems with cover and five collages by John Digby.
Poem with cover and four collages by John Digby.
Five prose poems with cover and five collages by John Digby.
Four prose poems by Francis Poole and four prose poems by Mark Terrill with collages by John Digby. Some contents of this folder have been removed to oversize box 48.
Poem with cover and thirteen collages by John Digby.
Poem with collages by John Digby.
Poem copiously illustrated with collages by John Digby.
This folder contains an extensive amount of John Digby collage materials related to Poole's poetry.
This manuscript contained poems published by Feral Press as
Runoff, (2010) and Combatants, (2010).Poem with cover and five collages by John Digby.
Poem with cover and four collages by John Digby.
Poem with cover and five collages by John Digby.
Prose poem with photographs by John Digby.
Prose poem with cover and illustrations by John Digby.
Three prose poems with e-hon cover and collages by John Digby.
Prose poem with cover and two illustrations by Linda Vi Vona. Poem by Vern Rutsala with cover and two illustrations by Linda Vi Vona. See also Artists--Linda Vi Vona.
Prose poem with cover and six collage illustrations by John Digby.
Prose poem with cover and two collages by John Digby.
Prose poem with cover and nine collages by John Digby.
Ten prose poems with automatic drawings by John Digby.
Prose poems with illustrations by John Digby.
Prose poem illustrated by Linda Vi Vona.
Three prose poems by Vem Rutsala with cover and four illustrations by Elliot Bassman.
Five prose poems by Vern Rutsala with cover and six illustrations by Linda Vi Vona.
Two prose poems by Vern Rutsala with cover and three illustrations by Linda Vi Vona. See also Artists--Linda Vi Vona.
Illustrations by Luda Pahl.
Poem with photography by Joan Digby.
Poem with cover and four collages by John Digby.
Four poems by Stephen Sandy with cover and seven collages by John Digby.
Translated from Bengali by Hassanal Abdullah. Collages by John Digby.
Poem with cover illustration by the author.
Essay with cover and six collages by Eric Edelman.