I have begun 1 Corinthians. Here is the first chapter. i dedicate this piece to Gregory Betts for his insightful and interesting engagement with my work.
Tuesday, February 01, 2022
Gregory Betts : Decoding (visual) Poetry: Some Thoughts on Amanda Earl’s Vispo Bible
Gratitude to Gregory Betts for his engagement with the Vispo Bible and to rob mclennan for publishing it in Periodicities.
Here is a link.
I am currently working on 1 Corinthians from the Old Testament. I hope to have 1 and 2 Corinthians completed this year. 1COR has 16 chapters and 2COR has 13. I'll keep you posted.
Monday, December 20, 2021
A Celestial Warrior from Welcome to Upper Zygonia appears in R is for Revolution
Thanks to Tchello d'Barros for including my collage, A Celestial Warrior of the Zygonian Galaxy in R is for Revolution in the Visual Poetry Museum on Facebook. The exhibitions features 111 artists from 30 countries. I am the only Canadian.
From Tchello:
ABOUT THIS EXHIBITION
The participating artists responded - with their works - to the following provocation: “Is there currently space for revolutions? Is there in your heart any revolt against the current status quo? Do we need to change something on our street or in global geopolitics? Will humanity witness any (r)evolution in this century? Can art be a weapon to transform consciences? You don't need to answer these questions, but your art can tell us a little about your imaginary combatant. The project is also a tribute to the bicentennial of the South American revolutionary Anita Garibaldi (1821-1849), the ‘heroine of 2 worlds’. Anita was an amazon, wife, mother, guerriller and revolutionary, fighting in 4 wars in Brazil, Uruguay and Italy. You may choose creat your art under Anita’s miyth, with her figure, name or history!”
According to the curator, "this exhibition presents part of the imagination of artists from all continents from their worldview to the theme "Revolution". If in the 19th century the Brazilian guerrilla Anita Garibaldi fought for freedom in South America and Europe, today we have our demands for change, whether on our street or in global geopolitics. May art be as contemporary as the everyday revolutions in our consciences".
THE ARTISTS
ARGENTINA: Alejandra Bocquel - Amelia Vilches - Ana Verónica Suárez - Catanzaro Claudia - Hilda Paz - Ma. Angélica Carter Morales - Norberto José Martinez – Omaromar - Patricia Negreira - Raquel Gociol - Rosa Gravino - Walter Brovia | AUSTRALIA: Denis Smith | AUSTRIA: Piroska Horváth | BELGIUM: Luc Fierens - Renaat Ramon | BRASIL: Al-Chaer - Alex Hamburger – Almandrade - Frdipinto Constança Lucas - Denise Moraes - Eni Ilis - Gringo Carioca Franklin Valverde - Guto Lacaz - Hugo Pontes - Iara Abreu - Ivana Andrés - Jairo Fará - Janys Oliveira - Joaquim Branco - Maria De Lourdes Rabello Villares - Maria Tereza Penna - Marisa Vidigal - Mercedes Brandão - Roberto Keppler - Rosana Schmitt - Rui Costa Marques - Tchello d'Barros - Yolanda Freyre | CANADA: Amanda Earl | CHILE: Emilio López Gelcich | COLOMBIA: Ariel Chavarro Avila - Maskin - Tulio Restrepo | DENMARK: Marina Salmaso | FINLAND: Anja Matilla-Tolvanen | FRANCE: Cristophe Massé - Katerina Mandarik | GERMANY: Hans Braumueller & Ruggero Maggi - Horst Tress - Klaus Pinter | GREECE: Petala Eftichia | HUNGARY: József Bíró - Márton Koppány | ITALY: Angela Caporaso - Bruno Chiarlone - Cinzia Farina - Claudio Romeo - Cosma Tosca Bolgiani - Enzo Correnti - Enzo Patti - Franco Panella - Ljdia Musso - Mariano Lo Gerfo - Maya Lopez Muro - Morice Marcuse Carrara - Oronzo Liuzzi - Roberto Scala - Ruggero Maggi - Serse Luigetti | IRAN: Elham Hamedi | JAPAN: Keigo Hara | LATVIA: Gundega Strautmane | MEXICO: Elodia Corona Meneses - Gema Rios - Mac Ilhui - Persefone Manuel Oreste Suárez - Sergio Araht | PERU: Liesel Cerna - Victor Valqui Vidal | POLAND: Miron Tee | PORTUGAL: António Barros - Avelino Rocha - Feliciano De Mira - Marcela Santos - Vanessa Bastos | RUSSIA: Alexander Limarev - Irina Novikova | SERBIA: Dejan Bogojevic | SPAIN: Àlex Monfort - Alfonso Aguado Ortuño - Daniel De Cullá - Francisco Sánchez Luz - Ferran Destemple - José L. Campal - Miguel Jimenez - Sabela Baña - Victoria Esgueva | SWITZERLAND: Bruno Schlatter | URUGUAI: Clemente Padin | USA: C. Mehrl Bennet - Joey Patrickt - John M. Bennet - Nico Vassilakis - Reid Wood - Rosalie Gancie | UNITED KINGDOM: Lola Gonzáles | VENEZUELA: _Guroga
SERVICE
Mail Art exhibition ‘‘R for Revolution”
Curatorship: Tchello d’Barros | Brasil
Executing Entity: Visual Poetry Museum
Production: Instituto Cultural Tchello d’Barros
Opening: 18 December 2021
Visit period: 18-31 december.2021
Site: Visual Poetry Museum’s community in Facebook
Links:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/181520088856020
https://www.facebook.com/visualpoetrymusem
https://www.facebook.com/tchellodbarros
CONTACT
Tchello d’Barros
Curator | “R for Revolution”tchellodbarros@yahoo.com.br
www.tchellodbarros.wordpress.com
Rio de Janeiro - Brasil
Saturday, December 04, 2021
Kept Awake by Little Fires Dreaming from Welcome to Upper Zygonia will be in the Trickhouse Press 2022 Annual
Thanks to Dan Power of Trickhouse Annual for including several visual poems/doodles from Welcome to Upper Zygonia. Also included is the full interview / e-mail exchange with Imogen Reid, "Creating Culture Among Women: Friendship and List Making for Judith: Women Making Visual Poetry, A Conversation with Imogen Reid" originally published in abridged form by Wisdom Body Collective.
You can preorder the anthology here while copies last.
To whet your appetite, here's the table of contents:
Amanda Earl - Kept Awake by Little Fires Dreaming
Astra Papachristodoulou - from Like Amber
Chris Kerr - Mildred
David Spittle - enfants en deuil
draftpost0.github.io - like something else, nerds
Imogen Reid - 5 poems
James Knight - from Bodies
Joseph Turrent - Cyclohexane Drift Example
JP Seabright - Moveable Type
Katy Wimhurst - The State We're In
Laura Kerr - 6 poems
Maggs Vibo - M.U.S.I.C.
Martin Wakefield - Lego Poems
Matthew Haigh - BORN
Paul Robinson - STOPLOSS
ReVerse Butcher - 8 poems
Robin Boothroyd - Unearthed
S Cearley - 9 poems
Silje Ree - Knitting Patterns
Sy Brand - On Having Needs
Vilde B. Torset - Like A Mindmap of a Thoughtcloud
Amanda Earl - "Creating Culture Among Women: Friendship and List Making for Judith: Women Making Visual Poetry, A Conversation with Imogen Reid"
Scott Lilley - "An interview with Trickhouse editor Dan Power"
SJ Fowler - "Sticker Poems: Unstuck"
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
260-page, A4, full-colour.
Jérôme Melançon on the Vispo Bible
I was startled with delight by Jérôme Melançon's recent note of praise on the Small Machine Talks, the podcast I host through AngelHousePress.
"Amanda’s frequent mentions of the Vispo Bible project (look it up (nothing else comes up!) or look at this essay) give a sense of a shifting, evolving work that is promising to become one of the major creations in Canadian poetry, the equivalent of a series of long poems, something I’d perhaps place beside bp nichol’s Martyrology in terms of its ambition and daring (and of course the religious/non-religious metamorphosis, the saints). I can’t imagine publishing such a large project piece by piece, as it moves forward and evolves, and not being able to go back to change the beginning. There’s courage both in the undertaking and in the releasing of this major work. And there’s something beautifully vulnerable and brave in sharing this project, bringing it into conversation, throughout the seasons of the podcast, giving a sense of its evolution and being honest about the relationship to the instruments and software that make it possible and force its transformations.”
Gobsmacked!
Friday, December 03, 2021
The Book of Joshua, Old Testament from the Vispo Bible is now completed
I have now completed The Book of Joshua from the Old Testament. This is Chapter 24.
https://www.instagram.com/p/CXC2yHHLmhMDozu2_pjA0hixtsxT54wgzOvts80/
The Vispo Bible now has 343 pages, with 8 / 39 books from the Old Testament and 10 / 27 books from the New Testament completed. Still many books, chapters and verses to go. There's a reason why this is a life's work. I began it in June, 2015. I am into my 6th year.
More info about the Vispo Bible
http://eleanorincognito.blogspot.com/2020/05/where-can-you-find-work-from-vispo.html
Sunday, October 31, 2021
Upper Zygonia Meets Dragana

Friday, October 15, 2021
Friday, July 23, 2021
Nusquam from Welcome to Upper Zygonia
Nusquam is from Thomas More's Utopia and means nowhere. Parts of The Dream Beings of Upper Zygonia have been woven in to the visual poem. Thank you to the City of Ottawa for the Creation and Production Fund for Established Artists received in July 2021. This is one of several visual poems that will be part of the manuscript, a collection of poems entitled "Welcome to Upper Zygonia."
Monday, June 21, 2021
So Many Silenced, So Many Unnamed, the poster
if i could afford it, i would make a 24 x 36 inch poster to offer for sale; instead, here it is.
and here is a link to a better quality of the poster which you can download for free.
SO MANY SILENCED, SO MANY UNNAMED
So Many Silenced, So Many Unnamed is a translation of specifically misogynistic passages of the Bible and early Christian writings. The Vispo Bible is a defiant feminist response to the Bible and its hate - misogyny, racism, homophobia, transphobia, xenophobia. The interpretation and enforcement of these texts can be directly linked to the ongoing bigotry and violence we are living in today.
Sunday, June 20, 2021
SMS / SMU : thank you and sources + Gertrude Stein's Tender Buttons [A Long Dress]
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So Many Silenced, So Many Unnamed |
What is the current that makes machinery, that makes it
crackle, what is the current that presents a long line and a necessary waist.
What is this current.
What is the wind, what is it. Where is the serene length, it is there and a dark place
is not a dark place, only a white and red are black, only a yellow and green
are blue, a pink is scarlet, a bow is every color. A line distinguishes it. A
line just distinguishes it. Gertrude Stein - 1874-1946 // Main Sources [additional sources for individual visual poems are
quoted within the entry.] Wikipedia list
of women in the Bible 100 Dresses: The Costume Institute / The Metropolitan
Museum Of Art, Yale University Press, 2010. Alice Connor, Fierce: Women of the Bible and Their
Stories of Violence, Mercy, Bravery, Wisdom, Sex, and Salvation, Fortress
Press, 2017. April D. Deconick, Holy Misogyny Why The Sex And Gender Conflicts In The Early Church Still
Matter, Bloomsbury, 2011. Lydia Edwards, How to Read a Dress. A Guide to Changing
Fashion from the 16th to the 20th Century, Bloomsbury Academic, 2019. Lindsay Hardin Freeman, Bible Women: All Their Words and
Why They Matter Forward Movement, 2014, Fifth printing, 2020. Sue Poorman Richards and Lawrence O. Richards, Women of
the Bible: The Life and Times of Every Woman in the Bible, Thomas Nelson, 2003. List of podcasts I listened to during the making of this
work: Chloë Proctor,
Sascha Akhtar, Sarah Dawson, JD House, Aaron Kent Full House Lit Podcast Chloë
Proctor and Richard Capener Between the Covers with David Naimon Natalie Diaz – Part 1
and Part
2 Commonplace with Rachel Zucker Penteract Press Episode
24: Kate Siklosi, Gregory Betts, & Nasser Hussain Thank you to the Ontario Arts Council Recommender Grant
for Writers Program for funding So Many Silenced, So Many Unnamed. Thank you to
the recommenders: Invisible Publishing and the New Quarterly. And a huge thanks
to all the feminist activists, artists and writers of the past, present and
future who are trying to make a world that is just and equal for all. For those who are able to provide aid and support, please
donate or assist your local women’s shelter, organizations
fighting for gender equality, to world
wide feminist organizations, pro-choice groups fighting for the autonomy of
women over reproductive rights, such as the Abortion
Right Coalition of Canada. If you’d like to support an Ottawa based organization, I
suggest Cornerstone for Women,
which provides emergency housing and other support locally.
Thank you for your interest and support. I am honoured
and grateful. |
Saturday, June 19, 2021
SMS/SMU Judges 19.29
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So Many Silenced, So Many Unnamed |
Judges 19.29 “He took a knife and laid hold on his concubine, and divided her, together with her bones, into twelve pieces.”
the art entitled Vela Sikubhekile was
created by Nandipha Mntambo. “Mntambo was born in Mbabane, Swaziland. In 2007,
she completed a Master’s in Fine Art from the Michaelis School of Fine Art at
the University of Cape Town. Mntambo currently lives in Johannesburg. The work
is on display at the Zeitz Museum of
Contemporary Art Africa (Zeitz MOCAA).
"Her work addresses ongoing debates around traditional
gender roles, body politics, and identity. She works in photography, sculpture,
video, and mixed media to explore the liminal boundaries between human and
animal, femininity and masculinity, attraction and repulsion, life and death.”
After I had made this visual poem, at some point, it
dawned on me that I was inspired specifically by Nandipha Mntambo’s Vela
Sikubhekile.
Friday, June 18, 2021
SMS/SMU François Rabelais
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So Many Silenced, So Many Unnamed |
When I say woman I mean a sex so weak, so fickle, so
variable, so changeable, so imperfect, that Nature — speaking with all due
reverence and respect — seems to me, when she made woman, to have strayed from
that good sense with which she had created and fashioned all things. I have
pondered over it five hundred times yet I can reach no solution except that
Nature had more regard for the social delight of man and the perpetuating of
the human species than for the perfection of individual womanhood. Certainly
Plato does not know into which category to put women: rational animal or
irrational beast.
François Rabelais, Gargantua and Pantagruel Jamie Leigh, Sexism
in Classic Literature
“The garment is an element on which the artist has often
pondered. To her it represents the tension between nature and artifice, between
our desire to be free and our need to represent ourselves.” Jane
Sterbak |
Thursday, June 17, 2021
SMS/SMU The Unnamed Women
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So Many Silenced, So Many Unnamed |
adulteress, anointing sinner, anointing woman, bent
woman, bride of Cana, Catalphas’ servant girls, Cain’s wife, crippled woman,
daughters of men, daughters of Zelopehad, David’s ten concubines, demonized
slave girl, gifted artisans, Hebrew woman, Jairus’ wife and daughter, Jerusalem
disciples, Job’s wife, Lot’s wife, Naman’s wife’s slave girl, Noah’s wife,
notable women of Shunem, Paul’s sister, persecuted disciples, prominent women,
Queen of Sheba, Samaritan mother, Samaritan woman, Samaritan women, Samson’s
mother, Shunammite woman, sinful woman, Syrophoenician’s woman, Timothy’s
mother, two harlots, Tyrian disciples, widow of Nain, widow of Zarepath, widow,
poor, widow with the mite, widowed wife of a prophet, widows, wise woman of
Tekoa, wise woman of the city, witch of En Dor, woman who blessed Jesus’
mother, woman with issue of blood, women disciples, women of Israel, women
witnesses to resurrection
Sue Poorman Richards and Lawrence O. Richards, Women of
the Bible: The Life and Times of Every Woman in the Bible, Thomas Nelson, 2003. Erase
the Patriarchy: An Anthology of Erasure Poetry edited by Isobel O’Hare
(University of Hell Press, 2020) |
Wednesday, June 16, 2021
SMS/SMU Thomas Aquinas
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So Many Silenced, So Many Unnamed |
"As regards the individual nature, woman is defective and misbegotten, for the active force in the male seed tends to the production of a perfect likeness in the masculine sex; while the production of woman comes from a defect in the active force or from some material indisposition, or even from some external influence. "–Thomas Aquinas, Doctor of the Church, 13th century
//
“片言⇄カタコト⇄broken
language is an ongoing text based project of Japanese kanji characters that
have different definitions in Cantonese and Japanese.
Tuesday, June 15, 2021
SMS/SMU John Wesley
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So Many Silenced, So Many Unnamed |
Wife: Be content to be insignificant. What loss would it
be to God or man had you never been born.–John Wesley, founder of Methodist
movement (1703-1791)
//
"is an artist and writer working with text, installation
and objects. Her research in the framework of the Art Research programme at Goldsmiths
is concerned with narrative holes in women*’s writing and the temporalities of
the “wounded text”. Katharina tries to activate textual holes as a subversive
feminist practice of resistance with insurrectional potential that treats the
textual wound as a political and writerly strategy in opposition to
authoritarian systems. Her work has been shown, performed or read
internationally and is published by a.o. 3am Magazine, Zeno Press, Chris
Airlines, Ma Bibliothèque ."