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Elmslie, Kenward. (1929-2022) [Brainard, Joe. (1941-1994) - COVER ART] [Bidart, Frank. (b. 1939)]. "Circus Nerves". Los Angeles: Black Sparrow Press. 1971. First Edition.

Softcover. 8vo. 48 pp. Covers fine, blue endpapers. One of 750 copies in soft wrappers, this copy erroneously issued without the final two leaves (p. 49 "First Frost"; [50] limitation and author biography). Ownership signature of Frank Bidart to the ffe.

With one of the finest cover designs by Joe Brainard: the subtle sexiness of the offset torso, the primary color bonanza of tattoo parlor staple images arranged into an almost occult figuration. Brainard made a series of works featuring tattoos throughout the early 1970s - one was featured on the cover of Artforum in 2001 - and tattoos of anchors and butterflies would appear throughout his work. Tattoos make sense as Pop art images, endlessly repeated and recycled bodily ads of the cultural imagination, and Brainard handles them with his quintessential humor and vulnerability. The gorgeously typeset title page anticipates Elmslie's cross-genre American imagination. Taken together, a good visual primer for Elmslie's buoyant, charming, and powerfully weird lyrical gymnastics in Circus Nerves

Kenward Elmslie's poetry and prose is often combined with the graphical work of other artists. A collection of his writing, Motor Disturbance (1971), won the Frank O'Hara Award for Poetry in 1971. He was awarded the National Endowment of the Arts Award for Power Plant Sestina (1967) and the Ford Foundation Grant. In 1973 Elmslie began work as editor and publisher of Z Magazine and Z Press, working to promote the work of other New York School artists such as John Ashbery, Ron Padgett, James Schuyler, and perhaps most extensively, Joe Brainard. Elmslie s work with graphic artists such as Brainard combined poetry with art to emphasize their interconnectedness; his work in theatre demonstrates his commitment to art as a whole, not only to one medium.

From the collection of Frank Bidart, who received the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, the Griffin Poetry Prize Lifetime Recognition Award, and the 2017 National Book Award for Poetry for his book Half-light: Collected Poems 1965-2016. Perhaps Bidart's most celebrated poem, "The Second Hour of the Night," is partly based on his relationship with Brainard. "The relationship was," as Bidart has said, both "more than friendship and less than a romance." His "In Memory of Joe Brainard" is a profound elegy for his friend who died of AIDS-induced pneumonia in 1994. 

Elmslie, Kenward. (1929-2022) [Brainard, Joe. (1941-1994) - COVER ART] [Bidart, Frank. (b. 1939)] "Circus Nerves"

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Elmslie, Kenward. (1929-2022) [Brainard, Joe. (1941-1994) - COVER ART] [Bidart, Frank. (b. 1939)]. "Circus Nerves". Los Angeles: Black Sparrow Press. 1971. First Edition.

Softcover. 8vo. 48 pp. Covers fine, blue endpapers. One of 750 copies in soft wrappers, this copy erroneously issued without the final two leaves (p. 49 "First Frost"; [50] limitation and author biography). Ownership signature of Frank Bidart to the ffe.

With one of the finest cover designs by Joe Brainard: the subtle sexiness of the offset torso, the primary color bonanza of tattoo parlor staple images arranged into an almost occult figuration. Brainard made a series of works featuring tattoos throughout the early 1970s - one was featured on the cover of Artforum in 2001 - and tattoos of anchors and butterflies would appear throughout his work. Tattoos make sense as Pop art images, endlessly repeated and recycled bodily ads of the cultural imagination, and Brainard handles them with his quintessential humor and vulnerability. The gorgeously typeset title page anticipates Elmslie's cross-genre American imagination. Taken together, a good visual primer for Elmslie's buoyant, charming, and powerfully weird lyrical gymnastics in Circus Nerves

Kenward Elmslie's poetry and prose is often combined with the graphical work of other artists. A collection of his writing, Motor Disturbance (1971), won the Frank O'Hara Award for Poetry in 1971. He was awarded the National Endowment of the Arts Award for Power Plant Sestina (1967) and the Ford Foundation Grant. In 1973 Elmslie began work as editor and publisher of Z Magazine and Z Press, working to promote the work of other New York School artists such as John Ashbery, Ron Padgett, James Schuyler, and perhaps most extensively, Joe Brainard. Elmslie s work with graphic artists such as Brainard combined poetry with art to emphasize their interconnectedness; his work in theatre demonstrates his commitment to art as a whole, not only to one medium.

From the collection of Frank Bidart, who received the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, the Griffin Poetry Prize Lifetime Recognition Award, and the 2017 National Book Award for Poetry for his book Half-light: Collected Poems 1965-2016. Perhaps Bidart's most celebrated poem, "The Second Hour of the Night," is partly based on his relationship with Brainard. "The relationship was," as Bidart has said, both "more than friendship and less than a romance." His "In Memory of Joe Brainard" is a profound elegy for his friend who died of AIDS-induced pneumonia in 1994.