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May 23 2016

Contact

Facts

Title: 
Contact
Contact: An American Quarterly Review (1932)

Date of Publication: 
Dec. 1920 (no. 1) – July 1923 (no. 5)
Feb. 1932 (1:1) – Oct.1932 (1:3)

Place(s) of Publication: 
New York, NY

Frequency of Publication: 
Irregular (1920 – 1923)
Quarterly (1932)

Circulation: 
200 initial readers

Publisher: 
Robert McAlmon and William Carlos Williams: 1920 – 1923
Moss and Kamin Bookstore, New York: 1932

Physical Description: 
1920 – 1923: First two issues were mimeographed on standard letter paper. Last three issues were printed on standard letter paper.
1932: Bound, white paper. 23 cm. in length.

Price:
Unknown

Editor(s): 
Robert McAlmon (1920 – 1923)
William Carlos Williams (1920 – 1923; 1932)

Associate Editor(s): 
Robert McAlmon (1932)
Nathanael West (1932)

Libraries with Complete Original Issues: 
Harvard University; Princeton University; Columbia University; Ohio State University

Reprint Editions: 
New York: Kraus Reprint Co., 1967.

Description

William Carlos Williams and Robert McAlmon believed that in order for a distinctly American art form to take shape, they needed to initiate a break from European literary traditions and encourage artists to draw from personal experiences. Contact represented their attempt to do just that, as the title itself reflected McAlmon’s experience as a pilot: “Contact! was the command word used by pilots to denote the start of the engine and subsequent flight” (Tashjian 75). Williams hoped the magazine would expose promising American experimental writers both to the public and to one another, though the initial issue did encourage foreign contributions as well.

Between 1921 and 1923 five issues circulated. Though the initial readership of Contact included contributors to Broom and Others, it failed to reach a larger audience and the circulation only amounted to about two hundred. As Williams and McAlmon were privately funding the magazine (some speculate through McAlmon’s efforts posing nude and sleeping on a barge in New York City harbor), their failure to sell copies forced the magazine to fold in 1923, by which point McAlmon had moved to Paris. Williams restarted Contact in 1932 with Nathanael West joining the masthead and McAlmon remaining on as an associate editor from abroad. Under Williams’ editorship, the three 1932 issues placed a heavier emphasis on poetry and included a “Bibliography of Little Magazines,” which was one of the first attempts to catalogue contemporary Little Magazines.

Gallery

Manifesto

Contact‘s manifesto appeared on the first page of the first issue of the magazine in 1921:

“Issued in the conviction that art which attains is indigenous of experience and relations and that the artist works to express perceptions rather than to attain standards of achievement: however much information and past art may serve to clarify his perceptions and sophisticate his comprehensions, they will be no standard they will be no standard by which his work is adjudged. For if there are standards in reality and in existence and if there are values and relations which are absolute, they will apply to art. Otherwise any standard of criticism is a mere mental exercise, and past art signifies nothing.
“We are here because of our faith in the existence of native artists who are capable of having, comprehending and recording extraordinary experiences; we possess intellect sufficient to carry over the force of their emotional vigour; who do not weaken their work with humanitarianism; who deal with our situations, realizing that it is the degree of understanding about, and not situations themselves, which is of prime importance; and who receive meagre recognition.
“Attainment is meaningless unless there be some basis of measurement. Wishing to be open-minded toward all experiment–ourselves feeling that many literary forms, the novel, short story, metrical verse, are mannered, copied, and pretensious technique, — we still do not intend becoming spokesmen for any movement, group, or theory, and as thoroughly dislike a modern traditionalism as any manner of perceiving the arts. That artists are sophisticated beings who utilize their own contacts in art creation, and erudition incidentally as it has been assimilated, is an assumption of ours. They will be scientific insofar as medium is concerned, but their substance is no more scientific than is that of existence.
“We will be American, because we are of America; racial or international as the contractual realizations of those whose work we publish have been these. Particularly we will adopt no aggressive or inferior attitude toward “imported thought” or art.
“Our only instructions are upon standards which reality as the artists senses it creates, in contradistinction to standards of social, moral or scholastic value -hangovers from past generations no better equipped to ascertain value than are we. Assuming sufficient insight and intellect to convey feeling valuably, we are interested in the writings of such individuals as are capable of putting a sense of contact, and of definite personal realization into their work.”

Contact. 1:1 (Dec. 1920): 1.

Editors

William Carlos Williams (Sept. 17, 1883 – Mar. 4, 1963)
Co-Editor: 1920 – 1923; Editor: 1932

William Carlos Williams contributed to many little magazines, yet readers found him to have an unclassifiable style; conformity never suited his poetry. He experimented with Imagism, but never fully embraced one school of thought, and expressed frustration with T. S. Eliot’s “The Wasteland.” In Williams’ Kora in Hell (1920) he attacked Eliot’s intellectual approach to poetry and insisted that poetry must put an emphasis on precision of language and description. He continued publishing into the 1960s, and many consider his poetry a large influence for the Beat movement. Williams’ personal life hardly resembles his bold artistic declarations: receiving his M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1906, Williams practiced medicine in Rutherford, NJ throughout the duration of his writing career.

Robert McAlmon (Mar. 9, 1896 – Feb. 2, 1956)
Co-Editor: 1920 – 1923; Associate Editor: 1932

Robert McAlmon supposedly funded the first year of Contact by earning wages as a nude model while living on a barge in New York harbor (Tashjian 24). The writer’s fortune altered significantly when he married Bryher. The marriage was one of convenience: Bryher was in an open relationship with H. D., but needed a husband in order to receive her portion of a significant family wealth. Her father, wealthy British publisher Sir John Ellerman, funded Contact from 1921 – 1923. McAlmon moved to Paris in 1921 and lived there throughout the expatriate pilgrimage of the 1920s. He befriended James Joyce and established a publishing company, Contact Editions, to publish the works of American artists living abroad. The company released the first two novels of Hemingway, and works by Ezra Pound and Gertrude Stein. Despite his influence on and importance to expatriate writers, McAlmon remained a little-known writer, and is most remembered for his editorial and publishing efforts.

Contributors

Kay Boyle
“Shore”

e. e. cummings
“[‘let’s start a magazine]”
“[r-p-o-p-h-e-s-s-a-g-r]”
“[mouse) Won]”
“[ondumonde’]”

H. D.
“Prayer”
“Simeatha”

Wallace Gould
“Lithographs”

Marsden Hartley
“Chanticle for October”
“Return of the Native”

Mina Loy
“Oh Hell”
“Summer Night in a Florentine Slum”

Robert McAlmon
“The Blue Mandrill,” “Superwoman”

Marianne Moore
“In the Days of Prismatic Color”
“Those Various Scalpels”

David Moss
“Bibliography of the ‘Little Magazine’”

Wallace Stevens
“Invective Against Swans,” “Infanta Maria”

Nathanael West
Excerpts from Miss Lonelyhearts

William Carlos Williams
“New England”
“St. Francis Einstein of the Daffodils”
“Portrait of the Author”
“The Accident”
“The Canada Lily”

Yvor Winters
“Sonnet to the Moon”
“Chiron”

Bibliography

Chielens, Edward E., ed. American Literary Magazines: The Twentieth Century. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1992.

Contact. 1920 – 1923. New York: Kraus Reprint Corporation, 1932.

McAlmon, Robert. Being Geniuses Together. Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1968.

Tashjian, Dickran. William Carlos Williams and the American Scene, 1920-1940. New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, 1978.

Tranter, Jon. “The United States Poet Laureate – Some Background Information.”Jacket Magazine. Feb. 2003. 21 Oct. 2004.

Williams, William Carlos. Autobiography. New York: Random House, 1951.

Williams, William Carlos et al. “Robert McAlmon’s Prose.” Transatlantic Review 1.5 (1924): 361-364.

“Contact” compiled by Theodore Emerson (Class of ’06, Davidson College)

Written by Peter Bowman · Categorized: American

May 23 2016

Close Up

Facts

Title: 
Close Up: Devoted to the Art of Films

Date of Publication: 
July 1927 (1:1) – Dec. 1933 (10:4)

Place(s) of Publication: 
Territet, Switzerland: Jan. 1927 – Dec. 1930
London, England: Sep. 1928 – Dec. 1933 (3:3 – 10:4)

Frequency of Publication: 
Monthly: July 1927 – Dec. 1930
Quarterly: Jan. 1931 – Dec. 1933

Circulation: 
500 copies in each printing

Publisher: 
POOL, Switzerland & London

Physical Description: 
5 1/2″ x 7 3/4″, 30 – 100 pages. Bound in pumpkin-colored cover and wrapped in three-inch white paper strip with the motto of each month’s issue.

Price:
1 shilling / 5 francs / 1 mark / 25 cents

Editor(s): 
Kenneth Macpherson

Associate Editor(s): 
Annie Winifred Ellerman, under the pseudonym Bryher
Henry Joseph Hasslacher, under the pseudonym Oswell Blakeston
H. D., did not appear on the masthead

Libraries with Original Issues: 
Northwestern University; University of California, Los Angeles; Columbia University

Reprint Editions: 
New York: Arno Press, 1971.
Nendeln, Liechtenstein: Kraus Reprint.
London: World Microfilms Publications. (Little magazines series, 1889-1972) [Microfilm].
PDFs available at Archive.org and The Modernist Magazines Project

Description

Between 1927 and 1933, Close Up offered an analytical and literary examination of film and the future of the medium. It advocated film as an artistic medium and developed a forum for the discussion of film technique, theory, criticism and technology. Kenneth Macpherson served as editor while Winifred Ellerman, the heiress of a large shipping fortune, financially backed the magazine and served as its assistant editor under the pseudonym “Bryher.”

Macpherson and Bryher hoped that rigorous analysis of film would help the medium achieve recognition as an artistic form. They employed correspondents in many international cities to try to globalize their pursuit. The magazine boasted a wide audience with readers and contributors in America, England, France, Germany, Italy, the Soviet Union, and Switzerland, and was published in English, German, and French. This international focus gave Sergei Eisenstein and other Soviet and Eastern film theorists a voice in the West, and helped promote children’s film and African American film. Closer to home, Bryher and Macpherson established POOL Film Projects with the aspiration of raising the standards of British film, and produced three films: Wing Beat, Foothills, and Monkey’s Moon.

Gallery

Manifesto

After a lengthy analysis of film’s development from “trash” to “art,” Kenneth Macpherson outlines his hopes for Close Up:

“I want to arrange that people making films, and experimenting in all sorts of ways shall be able to see what others are doing in the same way. Which means public showing, in Paris and London, one hopes….something must be done to give films their due…The first two numbers of Close Up will deal with the film problem as a whole. After that we propose in each issue to deal with special conditions in Europe and the States with numbers on the Negro attitude and problem and on the Far East in their relation to the cinema.”

“As Is” Close Up 1:1 (July 1927). Reprinted (Donald 36-40).

Editors

Kenneth Macpherson (1903? – June 14, 1971)
Editor: July 1927 – Dec. 1933

Although Scotsman Kenneth Macpherson displayed an early interest in art, photography, and writing, he eventually developed a deep attachment to filmmaking. In 1927, he helped establish Close Up and began to produce films that experimented with new techniques. Of Macpherson’s three short films – Wing Beat (1927), Foothills (1928), and Monkey’s Moon (1929) – only fragments of Wing Beat survive. His only feature-length film, Borderline (1930), took on the difficult subjects of race and gender relations. Produced in the experimental and thick style which Macpherson advocated, the film was not received well by critics. After this negative response, Macpherson withdrew to his initial interests in art and writing. Macpherson moved to New York and then to Italy where he died in 1971.

Bryher (Sept. 2, 1894 – Jan. 28, 1983)
Assistant Editor: July 1927 – Dec. 1933

Bryher was born in 1894 in Margate, Kent, England as Annie Winifred Ellerman. Second in wealth only to the royal family, the Ellerman family provided well for their daughter, who adopted the penname Bryher in 1920, after her favorite Silesian Isle. Bryher’s family stipulated that for her to inherit her share of the family fortune she must be married, so she held marriages to Robert McAlmon (1921 – 1927) and then to Kenneth Macpherson (1927 – 1947), despite her homosexuality and close companionship with H. D. With her family money, Bryher supported Close Up financially and she contributed to the magazine substantially as an editor and writer.

H. D. (Sept. 10, 1886 – Sept. 27, 1961)
Assistant Editor (not listed on masthead): July 1927 – Dec. 1933

H. D. (Hilda Doolittle) was born in Pennsylvania in 1886. At Bryn Mawr College she became friends with Marianne Moore and Ezra Pound, who introduced her to European literary circles. Although she married Richard Aldington, she also had intense personal relationships with D. H. Lawrence and Bryher for most of her life, who both influenced her work. Her imagist poems appeared for the first time in Poetry in 1913, and she was a frequent contributor to The Transatlantic Review, The Egoist, and The English Review. Although she is most well-known for her poetry, H. D. was also interested in film, and appeared in two POOL Productions films, Foothills (1927) and Borderline (1930). She also acted as an assistant editor to Close Up and was one of the magazine’s main contributors.

Oswell Blakeston (1907 – 1985)
Assistant Editor: Jan. 1931 – Dec. 1933

Oswell Blakeston was the pseudonym of British writer, artist, and film-maker Henry Joseph Hasslacher. After an apprenticeship as a camera boy with Gaumont Studios, he secured an editorial position with Close Up. The little magazine launched his long career in the arts. In his lifetime, he published mystery novels, volumes of poetry, cookbooks, travel books, books on cinematography, photography guides, and contributed reviews and artwork to magazines.

Contributors

Oswell Blakestone
“British Solecisms”
“Freud on the Films”

Rene Crevel
“Les Hommes aux milles Visages”

Nancy Cunard
“Scottsboro”

Sergei Eisenstein
“Statement on Sound”

Barbara Low
“Mind Growth or Mind Mechanization”

Marianne Moore
“Fiction or Nature”
“Lot in Sodom”

Dorothy Richardson
“Continuous Performance”

Hanns Sachs
“Modern Witch-Trials”

Upton Sinclair
“Thunder Over Mexico”

Gertrude Stein
“Three Sitting Here”
“Mrs. Emerson”

Bibliography

Donald, James. Anne Friedberg and Laura Marcus. Close Up 1927-1933: Cinema and Modernism. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 1998.

Friedberg, Anne. Writing about Cinema: Close Up 1927-1933. Anne Arbor, MI: DAI, June 1984. 3522A-3523A.

Hernandez, H. “A Brief Biography of H. D.” The H. D. Home Page. 17 May 2009. 9 July 2009.

Macpherson, Kenneth, ed.. Close Up: Devoted to the Art of Films. London: POOL, 1933.

“Macpherson, Kenneth.” Screenonline. 27 Oct. 2004.

Marek, Jayne. “Bryher and Close Up.” H. D. Newsletter 3:2, (1990) pp 27-37.

“Oswell Blakeston: An Inventory of his Papers at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center.” The University of Texas at Austin. 9 July 2009.

“Camera Work” compiled by Sabrina Rissing (Class of ’06, Davidson College)

Written by Peter Bowman · Categorized: British, European

May 23 2016

Camera Work

Facts

Title: 
Camera Work: An Illustrated Quarterly Magazine Devoted to Photography

Date of Publication:
January 1903 (No.1) – June 1917 (No.49/50)

Place(s) of Publication:
New York, NY

Frequency of Publication: 
Quarterly

Circulation:
Approximately 1,000 copies per issue

Publisher:
Alfred Stieglitz

Physical Description:
Camera Work was bound with a handsome green/grey cover designed by Edward Steichen. The back cover was most often an advertisement for Eastman Kodak. The magazine was a relatively expensive publication primarily because of the excellence Stieglitz insisted on for the reproduction of photographs. Photographs were printed on photogravure plates made from the original negative. Often they were printed on Japanese tissue and individually placed on colored mounts. It is believed that many of Stieglitz’s reproductions were of better quality than the original photographs.

Price:
$6.50 per year

Editor(s):
Alfred Stieglitz (1903-1917)

Associate Editor(s):
None

Libraries with Original Issues:
Museum of Modern Art, New York University, Yale University, University of Chicago

Reprint Editions:
Nendeln/Liechtenstein : Kraus Reprint, 1969.
PDFs available online at the Modernist Journals Project

Description

After Alfred Stieglitz founded the Photo-Secession in 1902, he created the elite and avant-garde photographic journal, Camera Work. In creating Camera Work, Stieglitz wanted to construct the “finest, most serious, most beautifully produced photographic periodical” in existence, an endeavor in which most critics agreed he succeeded (Bochner 35). Although his publication was dedicated to propagating the principles of the Photo-Secession movement, in the first issue of the magazine Stieglitz asserted that Camera Work “owes allegiance to no organization or clique, and though it is the mouthpiece of the Photo-secession that fact will not be allowed to hamper its independence to the slightest degree” (15). Despite this assertion, Stieglitz did not do much to diversify the contents of his magazine, and most of its contents were from a select group of regular contributors and members of the Photo-Secession movement. In fact, of the 473 photographs published in Camera Work, 357 were the work of fourteen photographers, including Stieglitz himself. The remaining 116 photographs were the work of 39 photographers (Whelan 192). According to Stieglitz, the main goal of the magazine was to publish the photographs that were the best examples in the field and to publicize photography as an art form. Each issue included photographs from about three photographers printed on high-quality paper, and around ten articles including opinion pieces, exhibition reviews, and essays on photographic aesthetic. Throughout the fourteen years of the quarterly journal’s publication, fifty issues were produced and 473 photographs were published. During the magazine’s entire run from 1903 to 1917, Stieglitz served as editor in chief, publisher, and was also one of the magazine’s major contributors.

Gallery

Manifesto

Camera Work’s statement of purpose appeared in the first issue of the publication in 1903. Beneath the manifesto, Alfred Stieglitz listed his name and his position as editor, followed by the names of his associate editors: Joseph T. Keiler, Dallett Fuguet, and John Francis Straus. Titled “An Apology” it reads:

“The time appearing ripe for the publication of an independent American photographic magazine devoted largely to the interests of pictorial photography, ‘Camera Work’ makes its appearance as the logical outcome of the evolution of the photographic art.

It is proposed to issue quarterly an illustrated publication which will appeal to the everincreasing ranks of those who have faith in photography as a medium of individual expression, and, in addition, to make converts of many at present ignorant of its possibilities…

Only examples of such work as gives evidence of individuality and artistic worth, regardless of school, or contains some exceptional feature of technical merit, or such as exemplifies some treatment worthy of consideration, will find recognition in these pages. Nevertheless the pictorial will be the dominating feature of the magazine…

‘Camera Work’ owes allegiance to no organization or clique, and though it is the mouthpiece of the Photo-Secession that fact will not be allowed to hamper its independence to the slightest degree.”

“An Apology.” Camera Work. No. 1 (Jan. 1903): 15

Editors

Alfred Stieglitz (Jan. 1, 1864 – July 13, 1946)
Editor (1903 – 1917)

Alfred Stieglitz was born in on January 1, 1864 in Hoboken New Jersey, to a German-Jewish family. A major figure of the Modernist period, Stieglitz was both an artist and a revolutionary who devoted himself to promoting photography as a major form of artistic expression. After studying in Europe, Stieglitz returned to New York in the 1890s and was profoundly discouraged by the progress of American photography. In 1897 Stieglitz published Camera Notes after co-founding the New York Camera Club, but in 1902 it ceased publication. In 1902, Stieglitz founded and became the director of the Photo-Secession, a movement devoted to photography as an art form and a secession from the opinion of the masses. Stieglitz founded Camera Work in 1903, a publication based off of the ideals of the Photo-Secession and designed to showcase the best examples of American and European pictorial photography. The other major component of the Photo-Secession was Stieglitz’s gallery, 291, located at 291 5th Avenue. Stieglitz served as the editor and publisher of Camera Work until 1917. In 1924, he married the artist Georgia O’Keefe, and continued to promote photography until his death in 1946.

Contributors

Annie W. Brigman
“The Brook”
“The Cleft of the Rock”

Alvin Langdon Coburn
“Broadway & the Singer Building by Night”
“Notre Dame”

Frank Eugene
“Adam and Eve”
“Mr. Alfred Stieglitz”

Eduard J. Steichen 
“Bartholmé”
“Experiment in Three-Color Photography”
“The Flatiron—Evening”
“Pastoral—Moonlight”

Alfred Stieglitz
“Old and New New York”
“The Steerage”
“The Terminal”

Paul Strand
“Wall Street”
“The White Fence”

Clarence H. White
“Boys Going to School”
“Morning”
“The Orchard”

Bibliography

Bochner, Jay. An American Lens: Scenes from Alfred Stieglitz’s New York Secession. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2005.

Green, Jonathan. Camera Work: A Critical Anthology. Millerton: Aperture, Inc., 1973.

Hathi Trust Digital Library.

Hoffman, Frederick J., Charles Allan, and Carolyn F. Ulrich. The Little Magazine: A History and a Bibliography. 2nd ed. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1947.

Mancini, J.M. Pre-Modernism: Art-World Change and American Culture from the Civil War to the Armory Show Princeton: Princeton UP, 2005.

Scholes, Robert and Sean Latham. “Modernist Journals Project.” (n.d.): MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 13 Sept. 2010.

Richter, Peter-Cornell. Georgia O’Keefe and Alfred Stieglitz. Munich: Prestel, 2001.

Stieglitz, Alfred. Camera Work: A Pictorial Guide. Ed. Marianne Fulton Margolis. New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1978.

Stieglitz, Alfred. “An Apology.” Camera Work. No. 1. July 1903.

“Stieglitz, Alfred.” Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers. London: Continuum, 2005. Credo Reference. Web. 19 September 2010.

Whelan, Richard. Alfred Stieglitz. Boston/New York: Little, Brown, and Company, 1995.

“Camera Work” compiled by Liza Winship (Class of ‘11, Davidson College)

Written by Peter Bowman · Categorized: American

Apr 07 2016

Bruno’s Weekly

Facts

Title:
Bruno’s Weekly

Date of Publication: 
July 1915 (1:1) – Dec. 1916 (3:26)

Place(s) of Publication: 
Greenwich Village, NY

Frequency of Publication: 
Weekly

Circulation:
Unknown

Publisher: 
Charles Edison

Physical Description: 
Approx. 16 pages per issue. Published essays, poems, short stories, short plays, reviews of theater, “The Monday Matinee” Section, “Children’s House” section, and small illustrations, many by Clara Tice. Cover page read: “Edited by Guido Bruno in his Garret on Washington Square.” Magazine title on first page followed by a poem, often a handwritten copy. Special sections included: “Books of the Week” (1:11); “In Our Village” (1:11); “Why and How I Got Married” (3:13); “Splitting the Ears of the Groundlings” (3:18). First advertisements appeared in December 1915.

Price: 
5 cents per issue / $1 per year (1915)
5 cents per issue / $2 per year (1916)

Editor(s): 
Guido Bruno

Associate Editor(s):
Unknown

Libraries with Complete Original Issues: 
Library of Congress; Columbia University; Brown University
PDFs available via Princeton University’s Blue Mountain Project

Reprint Editions: 
Ann Arbor, Michigan: UMI, 2004 (Little Magazines. American 1910 – 1919) [microform]

Description

Founded by Guido Bruno in 1915, Bruno’s Weekly celebrated Greenwich Village and its people. It was edited from Bruno’s “garret, a Brownstone flat in Washington Square,” where he also published Bruno’s Chap Books, Greenwich Magazine, and other little magazines. The weekly issues contained local news and gossip as well as poetry, short stories and artwork by local artists.

Many articles were written in poetic prose that romanticized the Village, while others highlighted newcomers to the area. Alfred Kreymborg, Clara Tice, Djuna Barnes, Ilonka Karasz, and Guido Bruno himself were regular contributors. Published by Charles Edison, the magazine was a great supporter of the New York theatre scene, specifically the Thimble Theatre. As Edison was the owner of this theatre, the back cover typically listed the upcoming week’s performances.

Gallery

Manifesto

Bruno’s Weekly issued no formal manifesto, but one issue offered a simple statement of purpose:

“BRUNO’S WEEKLY: Published by Charles Edison, son of the inventor, and edited by Guido Bruno in his Garret on Washington Square. Pictures, Stories, Poetry, History, and Music With One Purpose Only:
TO PLEASE YOUR EYES AND EARS.
A weekly show you will applaud.”

Bruno’s Weekly 1:13 (Oct. 1915): 131.

Editors

Guido Bruno (1880 – 1942)
Editor: June 1915 – Dec. 1916

Guido Bruno was a significant figure in Greenwich Village, NY. From his garret in Washington Square, he published the little magazines Bruno’s Weekly, Bruno’s Chapbooks, and Greenwich Magazine. He is best known for the authors he published, including Alfred Kreymborg, Marianne Moore, George Bernard Shaw, Djuna Barnes, Oscar Wilde, Sadakichi Hartman, Alfred Douglas, and Richard Aldington. He also published the artwork of numerous well-known artists, such as Clara Tice and Ilonka Karasz. He was a regular contributor of articles, short stories, and translations for Bruno’s Weekly.

Contributors

Richard Aldington
“Happiness”

Djuna Barnes
“The Cabaret Dancer” and numerous drawings

Guido Bruno
Articles, short stories, and translations

Ernest Dowson
“Amantium Irae”

Sadakichi Hartman
Poems and drawings

Ilonka Karaz
Drawings

Alfred Kreymborg
“Washington Square,” excerpts from Mushrooms 

Marianne Moore
“The Just Man and I”
“In ‘Designing a Cloak to Cloak his Designs,’ You Wrested from Oblivion a Coat of Immortality for Your Own Use”

Clara Tice
Many drawings between July 1915 and December 1916

George Bernard Shaw
“On Going to Church”

Oscar Wilde
“Rabboni”
“The Disciple”
“La Mer”
“Impressions of America”

Bibliography

Bruno’s Weekly. 1916. Microfilm. Little Magazines, American, 1910 – 1919. Ann Arbor, MI: UMI, 2004. Reel 1.

Images. Blue Mountain Project. Princeton University. Web. 29 Jun 2016.

Wetzseon, Ross. Republic of Dreams: Greenwich Village, the American Bohemia, 1910-1960. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2002.

Written by Peter Bowman · Categorized: American

Apr 07 2016

Broom

Facts

Title: 
Broom: An International Magazine of the Arts

Date of Publication: 
Nov. 1921 (1:1) – Jan. 1924 (6:1). Nothing published Mar. 1922 and Apr.- Jul. 1923

Place(s) of Publication: 
Rome, Italy: Nov. 1921 – Sept. 1922 (1:1 – 3:2)
Berlin, Germany: Oct. 1922 – Mar. 1923 (3:3 – 4:4)
New York, New York: Aug. 1923 – Jan. 1924 (5:1 – 6:1)

Frequency of Publication: 
Monthly

Circulation: 
Approx. 4000 by 1923

Publisher: 
The Broom Publishing Company, Inc.

Physical Description: 
33 cm in length. Contained book reviews, illustrations, criticism, short stories, plays, poems, reviews of cinema and theater. Frequent reproductions of paintings, sculptures, and woodcuts. Advertisements began appearing in April 1922 (2:1). Issues typically ran approx. 100 pages in length.

Price:
50 cents per issue / $5 per year

Editor(s): 
Harold A. Loeb (Nov. 1921 – Jan. 1924)
Alfred Kreymborg (Nov. 1921 – Feb. 1922)
Lola Ridge (American editor)

Associate Editor(s):
Slater Brown
Matthew Josephson
Malcolm Cowley

Libraries with Complete Original Issues:
Harvard University, Houghton Library; Ohio State University

Reprint Editions: 
New York: Kraus Reprint Co., 1967
Ann Arbor, Michigan: UMI, 2004 (Little Magazines. American, 1920 – 1929) [microform]
PDF of Aug. 1922 issue (3:1) available online at GoogleBooks

Description

In 1920 novelist Harold Loeb convinced Alfred Kreymborg to join him in editing a magazine that would publish any European or American writer they deemed worth reading. With Loeb’s financial backing Broom became a reality in November 1921. The magazine was “heavy of weight, rich in color, fine in binding and printing…nothing quite like its aristocratic format had ever been seen in America” (Hoffman 103). Yet after one year of publication Kreymborg left, as he felt the magazine was too conservative and didn’t feature enough American experimental writers. Loeb moved the magazine from Rome to Berlin, where he produced only four more issues before his money ran out. Matthew Josephson took over the funding of the magazine in New York, but he published only five more issues, the last of which never circulated.

During its time in Europe, Broom had an international tone and “introduced unknown or little known European writers and painters to America” (Hoffman 105). The loose editorial policy, wishing only to publish the best living artist and writers, made for a wide cross-section of contributors, from the up-and-coming to the well-established. The magazine reproduced the art of Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Joseph Stella, Juan Gris, Man Ray, Jacques Lipschitz, Rockwell Kent; it also showcased literary contributions from William Carlos Williams, E. E. Cummings, Jean Toomer, Gertrude Stein, Wallace Stevens, Hart Crane, Sherwood Anderson, Waldo Frank, Amy Lowell, John Dos Passos, Kay Boyle, and many more. Broom is not known for being a pioneering little magazine, but its “importance lies in the fact that it was in the vanguard of an intellectual movement, in the fact that it helped win the fight against the sentimentalities of the genteel tradition” (Hoffman 107).

Gallery

Manifesto

Broom‘s first and only manifesto appeared in the magazine’s opening issue. Below is an excerpt:

“Broom is selecting from the continental literature of the present time the writings of exceptional quality most adaptable for translation into English.
These will appear side by side with the contemporaneous effort in Great Britain and America.
The painters and sculptors will be represented by the best available reproductions of their work.
Throughout, the unknown, path-breaking artist will have, when his material merits it, at least an equal chance with the artist of acknowledged reputation.
In brief, Broom is a sort of clearing house where the artists of the present time will be brought into closer contact.
The permanence of this project is assured absolutely if supported by the subscriptions of those sympathetic to it.”

Broom. 1:1 (Nov. 1921): inside back cover.

Editors

Harold Albert Loeb (Oct. 18, 1891 – Jan. 20, 1974)
Editor: Nov. 1921 – Jan. 1924

Born into a wealthy family with investment bankers on his father’s side and Guggenheims on his mother’s side, Harold Albert Loeb seemed an unlikely candidate to have become a little magazine editor and writer. Indeed, it wouldn’t be until 1917, after exhausting cattle farming, concrete pouring, and a New York City desk job, that Loeb looked to writing as a more interesting occupation. When he began working for the Sunwise bookstore in Greenwich Village, he became acquainted with a number of writers and artists. Among them was Gilbert Cannon, who took Loeb abroad to Paris. Once there, Loeb joined Alfred Kreymborg in establishing Broom. After editing the Little Magazine for four years, Loeb devoted his time to his own writing. He wrote several novels, including Doodab (1925) and The Professors Like Vodka (1927), and a memoir, The Way It Was.

Alfred Kreymborg (Dec. 10 1883 – Aug. 14 1966)
Co-Editor: Nov. 1921 – Feb. 1922

Alfred Kreymborg grew up in a working class family in New York City and became interested in modern art, photography, and writing while living in Greenwich Village. He founded The Glebe in 1913, which was “one of the first periodicals to sponsor experimental writing” (Hoffman 46). With a donation of $276 from Walter Conrad Arensberg, Kreymborg went on to found Others, a magazine dedicated to experimental poetry. Editor of Broom and American Caravan and contributor to Little Magazines well into the 1950s, Kreymborg achieved popular acclaim touring America with his puppet plays (1920-1) and a radio play he produced (1938). When he died in 1966, he had published forty books and served as president of the Poetry Society of America and as judge for the Pulitzer Prize for poetry.

Lola Ridge (Dec. 12 1873 – May 19, 1941)
American Editor: Feb. 1922 – Jan. 1924

Lola Ridge’s personality and her sympathy for the proletariat gave her considerable fame as a writer and a revolutionist in the 1920s. The Irish native attended Trinity College in New South Whales, Australia, before moving to San Francisco in 1907 to pursue writing and exercise her radical political viewpoints. Even when she gained literary fame for a sequence of poems titled “The Ghetto” published in New Republic, she and her husband lived a life of poverty as an exhibition of her devotion to the working poor. She served as associate editor to Alfred Kreymborg’s Others until it ceased publication in 1919, and then rejoined the writer in 1922 when she began to serve as American editor to Broom. In this position she ran a Broom salon, where she broke her vow of poverty to mingle with American writers. Ridge left Broom when she felt it was becoming overly avant-garde and modernist, and spent the rest of her career publishing increasingly conservative and politically-minded pieces.

Matthew Josephson (Feb. 5, 1899 – Mar. 13, 1978)
Associate Editor: 1922 – Jan. 1924

Born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1899, Matthew Josephson graduated Columbia University in 1920 and became a highly experimental poet, enjoying the company and influence of poets Kenneth Burke, Hart Crane, and Malcolm Cowley. When he moved to Paris in 1921 he became entranced by the Dadaists, whose interests in American modernism and industrialism helped Josephson embrace his culture. In 1922 he joined with Gorham Munson to publish Secession, a magazine he hoped would enlighten the world as to the aesthetic importance of the machine age. When Kreymborg offered him an editorial position with Broom in 1922, Josephson seized the opportunity and monopolized on the magazine’s large circulation to dispel his artistic beliefs. Although widely embraced in Europe, his Futurist and Dadaist literature and his collection of poems, Galimathias, failed to impress an American audience when Broom moved to Manhattan. When Broom collapsed in 1924, Josephson took a position on Wall Street for two years which transformed him into a new writer by 1926, and he denounced his former Dadaist ways. He turned to nonfiction, and produced a best-selling biography of Émile Zola, Zola, His Time: The History of His Martial Career in Letters (1928). From 1928-29, he worked as American editor for transition, and blasted William Carlos Williams and Ezra Pounds for being expatriates who refused to embrace their culture. At his death, Josephson was a renown biographer, particularly interested in American capitalism and French literature.

Contributors

Conrad Aiken
“Portrait of a Girl”

Sherwood Anderson
“The Contract”

Kay Boyle
“Morning”

Malcolm Cowley
“Mountain Farm”
“Young Man with Spectacles”

Hart Crane
“The Springs of Guilty Song”

Gordon Craig
“Dedicated to the Enemy”
Tragic Mask

e. e. cummings
“Three United States Poems”
“Sunset”

André Derain
Portrait

John Dos Passos
“Two University Professors”

Feodor Dostoyevsky
“Stavrogin’s Confession”

John Gould Fletcher
“To a Starving Man”

Waldo Frank
“Candy Cigar and Stationary”

Juan Gris
Painting
Drawings
Still Life

Matthew Josephson
“Made in America”
“After and Beyond Dada”

Rockwell Kent
The Young Sailor
Newfoundland Dirge

Harold Loeb
“The Mysticism of Money”

Amy Lowell
“Lilacs”

Henri Matisse
Interior
Still Life

Marianne Moore
“Snakes, Mongooses, Snake-Charmers and the Like”
“Hymen”

Pablo Picasso
Drawing of Igor Strawinsky
Ballerinas

Man Ray
“Seguidilla”

Lola Ridge
“Capital Nights”
“Waste”
“Maple-Sugar Song”
“Hospital Nights”

Carl Sandburg
“Four Steichen Prints”

Gertrude Stein
“If You Had Three Husbands”

Joseph Stella
The Swans
On Painting

Wallace Stevens
“Hymn from a Watermelon Pavilion”

Jean Toomer
“Kabnis”
“Seventh Street”

William Carlos Williams
“Fish”
“Hula-Hula”

Yvor Winters
“Drifting Deer”

Virginia Woolf
“In the Orchard”

Bibliography

Broom: An International Magazine of the Arts. 1924. New York: Kraus Reprint Co., 1967.

Hoffman, Frederick J., Charles Allen, and Carolyn F. Ulrich. The Little Magazine: A History and a Bibliography. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 1947.

“Lola Ridge.” Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit, Gale 2000. Literature Resource Center. Davidson College Lib., Davidson, NC. 26 June 2009 <http://galenet.galegroup.com>.

Sarason, Bertram D. “Harold A(lbert) Loeb.” American Writers in Paris, 1920-1939. Ed. Karen Lane Rood. Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 4. Detroit: Gale Research, 1980. Literature Resource Center. Davidson College Lib., Davidson, NC. 23 June 2009.

Shi, David E. “Matthew Josephson.” American Writers in Paris 1920 – 1939. Ed. Karen Lane Rood. Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 4. Gale Research, 1980. Literature Resource Center. Davidson College Lib., Davidson, NC. 23 June 2009.

“Broom” compiled by Simone Muller (visiting student), Theodore Emerson (Class of ’06, Davidson College) and Emily Smith (Class of ’06, Davidson College)

Written by Peter Bowman · Categorized: American, European

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