What’s old is new: Lovin’ that letterpress

Poster by Philip CheaneyMy front page this morning was nothing but economic trouble: condo sales in collapse, another bank failure, Congress squabbling over the price of health care reform, an analysis of the cash-for-clunkers program (it’s good for car companies, not so much of an environmental boon) and, tucked into one corner, the curious declaration by a group of economists that things are looking up. These were employed economists; unemployed economists tend to be more aware of the emperor’s bare behind.

We’ve had our share of bad news on the cultural front, too. A ballet company on the brink. A symphonic orchestra making deep budget cuts. A contemporary dance center in dire straits. All sorts of arts groups wondering, with good cause, whether they’ll make it through these tough times.

But the deal is, this town’s crawling with culture. It might not always be “high” culture and it might not always be buffered by wealthy patrons, but it’s all over the place, fed by the enthusiasms of people who create a scene around something because they genuinely enjoy what it is and the impact it has on their lives. Depression or not, you can’t keep curiosity from putting on its walking shoes and going out for a stroll.

Today I went to the minor mob scene that was the Letterpress Printers’ Fair at Liberty Hall, a small, well-weathered space stuck to a stubborn outcropping of North Ivy Street that refuses to give up its character to the waves of noise and hurtling traffic from the nearby freeway exchange that slashes through the neighborhood like a tornado through a Kansas farm. Liberty Hall clings to life and the public welfare like a robust, exotically flowering weed whose beauty is in the eye of chosen beholders. It’s a gritty joint, and I mean that in a good way.

Ivy turns into almost an alley at Liberty Hall, and today pedestrians took precedence over drivers. Printing enthusiasts were spilling out on the street. Vendors in the little front yard were cranking out sandwiches, selling carroty-looking cookies and cakes, dispensing drinks. The front porch was jumping, and once you got through the door it was like squeezing into the current with a school of fish. Rows of tables, a make-your-own print setup on the stage, printed T-shirts for sale and booth after booth offering greeting cards, posters, broadsides, hand-stitched books, pieces of old printers’ type, stationery and the varied wares of varied small presses.

1In one corner I ran into Laura Russell, whose 23 Sandy Gallery specializes in photography and book arts; in October her gallery will feature Broadsided! The Intersection of Art and Literature, a national juried exhibition of letterpress-printed broadsides.

“Crowded,” I said, squeezing into speaking range.

“This is quiet compared to this morning,” she shouted. “It was really packed then!”

So what excites all this passion? I think it has something to do with this city’s love for the small-scale, the handmade, the forgotten and outmoded, the aged but still lovely. With holding and feeling and handling things. With craft and artisanship. With making something on your own and saying, “That’s good!”

Printing is a tactile affair. It holds the advantage that a book holds over this digitized thing we’re writing and reading right now. It makes an impression, literally: little hills and valleys on the page, with the elegance and imperfections of the process. The paper, the imprint, the design, the stitching, the inking, all conspire to create something physical that offers the illusion if not the actuality of permanence. A letterpress creates a thing — a thing that can be beautiful, at a cost that most people can afford.

Like baseball, it holds its own history and its own language. The tray with the little cubicles that hold the print is the job case. The bits of blank metal that create spaces are called leading. You use coppers and brasses and kerns and ems and ens, and when you’ve finally got everything ready to roll you got that satisfying thwack! thwack! thwack!

Like haiku, a letterpress has severe limitations but opens a world of imagination. I saw some lovely bookmaking at the Oregon College of Art & Craft booth, and nice broadsides, and a series of fascinating monster cards — Dracula, King Kong, Frankenstein’s creature, with pertinent textual quotes for each — that caught my eye as a possible gift for my daughter, who knows her gothic although she is not arch.

“How much are these?” I asked.

“Oh, they’re not for sale,” a young woman replied. “These are just samples of students’ work that we’re showing.”

I liked learning about places with arcane names that stake their claim to their own oddball eddy in the stream. Letterary Press. Obscura Press. Cupcake Press. Twin Ravens Design & Letterpress. Red Bat Press. Stinky Ink Press (now there’s truth in advertising). Tiger Food Press. Emspace Book Arts Center. Bartleby’s Letterpress Emporium. Stumptown Printers Worker Cooperative, which promises “simple & sexy printing and paper-based products.”

So let the presses roll. Have fun. Surprise yourselves. Make beautiful things. Take sweet revenge on the economy. And try to keep your apostrophes under control.

7 Responses to “What’s old is new: Lovin’ that letterpress”

  1. Martha Ullman West Says:

    Gorgeous Bob. And to add an historical note–the Hogarth Press was born when Leonard Woolf thought it would be soothing for Virginia to set type. That it would take her mind off her writing and her “voices.” Ultimately it wasn’t, but the Hogarth Press books were beautiful, and the content wasn’t half bad either!

  2. MightyToyCannon Says:

    Sounds like a fun, if crowded, event. I particularly liked your paragraph speculating about Portland’s “love for the small-scale, the handmade, the forgotten and outmoded, the aged but still lovely.” There’s something to that idea that applies to everything from building bike frames to crafting beer. It’s also nice to think that in the age of iPhones and Kindles, people are still drawn to ink on paper. By the product name “Kindle” make anyone else think of Bradbury’s “Fahrenheit 451?”

  3. Clare Says:

    Thank you for this fantastic write-up of the letterpress fair, Bob. Your comments about Portland crawling with culture “fed by the enthusiasms of people who create a scene around something because they genuinely enjoy what it is and the impact it has on their lives” describes Portland so well and why events like this weekend’s letterpress fair can be so successful!
    Clare - Tiger Food Press/OCAC

  4. Bob Hicks Says:

    Welcome to the Art Scatter conversation, Clare. If we could publish A.S. on letterpress we would, although I’m not sure how The Google would handle delivery. And I’m SURE we couldn’t fit it onto one of those Blackberry gizmos!

  5. Robert Johnson Says:

    Robert,
    You write very well. I see the scenes you paint with words. Of course as a letterpress guy I see them a little better.
    Thank you

  6. Liz Says:

    I tell you what I am fed up of, is those big greetings card shops getting greedy and making us pay stupid amounts for cards. I am still studying so sometimes I can’t afford to spend much on cards so I tend to send my friends free birthday greetings cards online. I have saved so much money on greetings and postage, and my friends enjoy receiving something a little different. Hope this helps everyone who is having cash flow problems like me at the moment.

  7. A Successful Fair! » Twin Ravens Press Blog Says:

    [...] flickr stream here.  We also got a very lovely write-up on Art Scatter, which you can read here.   Have a Happy Sunday and I’ll be seeing you next week! Tags: Letterpress Printer’s [...]

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