Rupert Brooke

Rupert Brooke: Selected Poems

US$380

Illustrated by Ed Kluz

Introduced By Jon Stallworthy

A limited edition published to commemorate the poet’s death in April 1915 and designed to emulate the fine press editions of the early 20th century. In series with Selected Poems Edward Thomas and Selected Poems Wilfred Owen.

Rupert Brooke: Selected Poems

US$380
Book Details
 
Presentation Box & BindingQuarter-bound in goatskin, with paste-paper sides
Paper-covered slipcase blocked in gold on one side and inset with a lithograph label
Coloured top edge
Dimensions9¾ inches x 7 inches
FontSet in hot metal in Monotype Walbaum
Pages88 pages
AuthorRupert Brooke
Illustrated byEd Kluz
Illustration9 lithographs and 6 vignettes
Publication Date11/03/2015
PrintingLimited to 1,750 hand-numbered copies
Editor's Notes
 
A selection of Rupert Brooke’s most famous poems presented in a special limited edition to mark the centenary of his death. The book has been designed to reflect the values of the fine press movement of the early 20th century. The text, printed letterpress, is illustrated with original lithographs and quarter-bound in leather with hand-made paste-paper sides by Victoria Hall.

Brooke is famous both for his evocation of Edwardian England in poems such as ‘The Old Vicarage, Grantchester’ and for the wide-eyed patriotism of his later poems that herald the coming conflict. He died aged 27, before this illusion of a just and heroic war was completely shattered, although his final poem suggests that he may have begun to reconsider his idealistic stance. This edition contains superb new lithographs by Ed Kluz that capture the vitality and beauty of his verse.

About the illustrator

Ed Kluz on Illustrating Brooke

Illustrating the work of a poet always presents a challenge. Taking on board the ideas and imagery of a writer goes, to a certain extent, against the independent creative process of the artist. In this sense the illustrator of poetry is a conduit for the visions of others.

In order to find an approach to these illustrations, I looked for common metaphors within Brooke’s writing — water, darkness, light, solitude and the passing of time infuse the images. The second challenge was somehow to create a sense of narrative and movement within a single static representation; an image which is immediate but which also reveals itself slowly, presenting details and leading the eye, emulating the experience of reading a poem. Of all literary forms, poetry, in some ways, is most like an image. In this sense an accompanying illustration should at once work in tandem with the poem and function as an independent entity.

The challenges and rewards of autolithography

When presented with a new image-making process, I enjoy the experience of getting to know the character of the materials and finding an approach which makes best use of its particular qualities. The seemingly infinite possibilities of ink being pressed, transferred, lifted or squeezed onto paper never ceases to amaze me. The greatest challenge presented by autolithography was in translating the hand-drawn marks into the printed result. As with any print-making medium, there is the moment when the process takes control and creates something entirely unexpected. This is part of the joy of printmaking. Under the guidance of my old art school friend, Andrew Curtis at the Curwen Studio, we refined the drawings over several proofing stages. This was the most nail-biting and time-consuming part of the process, but in many ways also the most exciting.

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About the illustrator

Ed Kluz on Illustrating Brooke

Illustrating the work of a poet always presents a challenge. Taking on board the ideas and imagery of a writer goes, to a certain extent, against the independent creative process of the artist. In this sense the illustrator of poetry is a conduit for the visions of others.

In order to find an approach to these illustrations, I looked for common metaphors within Brooke’s writing — water, darkness, light, solitude and the passing of time infuse the images. The second challenge was somehow to create a sense of narrative and movement within a single static representation; an image which is immediate but which also reveals itself slowly, presenting details and leading the eye, emulating the experience of reading a poem. Of all literary forms, poetry, in some ways, is most like an image. In this sense an accompanying illustration should at once work in tandem with the poem and function as an independent entity.

The challenges and rewards of autolithography

When presented with a new image-making process, I enjoy the experience of getting to know the character of the materials and finding an approach which makes best use of its particular qualities. The seemingly infinite possibilities of ink being pressed, transferred, lifted or squeezed onto paper never ceases to amaze me. The greatest challenge presented by autolithography was in translating the hand-drawn marks into the printed result. As with any print-making medium, there is the moment when the process takes control and creates something entirely unexpected. This is part of the joy of printmaking. Under the guidance of my old art school friend, Andrew Curtis at the Curwen Studio, we refined the drawings over several proofing stages. This was the most nail-biting and time-consuming part of the process, but in many ways also the most exciting.

2 of 5

About the illustrator

Ed Kluz on Illustrating Brooke

Illustrating the work of a poet always presents a challenge. Taking on board the ideas and imagery of a writer goes, to a certain extent, against the independent creative process of the artist. In this sense the illustrator of poetry is a conduit for the visions of others.

In order to find an approach to these illustrations, I looked for common metaphors within Brooke’s writing — water, darkness, light, solitude and the passing of time infuse the images. The second challenge was somehow to create a sense of narrative and movement within a single static representation; an image which is immediate but which also reveals itself slowly, presenting details and leading the eye, emulating the experience of reading a poem. Of all literary forms, poetry, in some ways, is most like an image. In this sense an accompanying illustration should at once work in tandem with the poem and function as an independent entity.

The challenges and rewards of autolithography

When presented with a new image-making process, I enjoy the experience of getting to know the character of the materials and finding an approach which makes best use of its particular qualities. The seemingly infinite possibilities of ink being pressed, transferred, lifted or squeezed onto paper never ceases to amaze me. The greatest challenge presented by autolithography was in translating the hand-drawn marks into the printed result. As with any print-making medium, there is the moment when the process takes control and creates something entirely unexpected. This is part of the joy of printmaking. Under the guidance of my old art school friend, Andrew Curtis at the Curwen Studio, we refined the drawings over several proofing stages. This was the most nail-biting and time-consuming part of the process, but in many ways also the most exciting.

3 of 5

About the illustrator

Ed Kluz on Illustrating Brooke

Illustrating the work of a poet always presents a challenge. Taking on board the ideas and imagery of a writer goes, to a certain extent, against the independent creative process of the artist. In this sense the illustrator of poetry is a conduit for the visions of others.

In order to find an approach to these illustrations, I looked for common metaphors within Brooke’s writing — water, darkness, light, solitude and the passing of time infuse the images. The second challenge was somehow to create a sense of narrative and movement within a single static representation; an image which is immediate but which also reveals itself slowly, presenting details and leading the eye, emulating the experience of reading a poem. Of all literary forms, poetry, in some ways, is most like an image. In this sense an accompanying illustration should at once work in tandem with the poem and function as an independent entity.

The challenges and rewards of autolithography

When presented with a new image-making process, I enjoy the experience of getting to know the character of the materials and finding an approach which makes best use of its particular qualities. The seemingly infinite possibilities of ink being pressed, transferred, lifted or squeezed onto paper never ceases to amaze me. The greatest challenge presented by autolithography was in translating the hand-drawn marks into the printed result. As with any print-making medium, there is the moment when the process takes control and creates something entirely unexpected. This is part of the joy of printmaking. Under the guidance of my old art school friend, Andrew Curtis at the Curwen Studio, we refined the drawings over several proofing stages. This was the most nail-biting and time-consuming part of the process, but in many ways also the most exciting.

4 of 5

About the illustrator

Ed Kluz on Illustrating Brooke

Illustrating the work of a poet always presents a challenge. Taking on board the ideas and imagery of a writer goes, to a certain extent, against the independent creative process of the artist. In this sense the illustrator of poetry is a conduit for the visions of others.

In order to find an approach to these illustrations, I looked for common metaphors within Brooke’s writing — water, darkness, light, solitude and the passing of time infuse the images. The second challenge was somehow to create a sense of narrative and movement within a single static representation; an image which is immediate but which also reveals itself slowly, presenting details and leading the eye, emulating the experience of reading a poem. Of all literary forms, poetry, in some ways, is most like an image. In this sense an accompanying illustration should at once work in tandem with the poem and function as an independent entity.

The challenges and rewards of autolithography

When presented with a new image-making process, I enjoy the experience of getting to know the character of the materials and finding an approach which makes best use of its particular qualities. The seemingly infinite possibilities of ink being pressed, transferred, lifted or squeezed onto paper never ceases to amaze me. The greatest challenge presented by autolithography was in translating the hand-drawn marks into the printed result. As with any print-making medium, there is the moment when the process takes control and creates something entirely unexpected. This is part of the joy of printmaking. Under the guidance of my old art school friend, Andrew Curtis at the Curwen Studio, we refined the drawings over several proofing stages. This was the most nail-biting and time-consuming part of the process, but in many ways also the most exciting.

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About the Author

His work was revered by literary greats such as T. S. Eliot, Henry James and D. H. Lawrence; W. B. Yeats called him ‘the handsomest man in England’; Winston Churchill eulogised him in a three-page Times obituary; others knew him as a tormented lover. Few literary figures have been mythologised as much as the poet Rupert Brooke.

Brooke was born in Rugby, England, in 1887. He studied at King’s College, Cambridge, living for a time in the village of Grantchester. Here he adopted a neo-Pagan lifestyle which later inspired the nostalgia of his most famous poem, ‘The Old Vicarage, Grantchester’. In 1912, at the end of a tempestuous love affair with Ka Cox, he suffered a breakdown, but found happiness in Tahiti, where he lived for several months and produced some of his best poetry. Under the patronage of his university friend Eddy Marsh he came to know Winston Churchill, George Bernard Shaw and other figures of the political and literary elite. Brooke joined the Royal Naval Division when war broke out. In February 1915, bound for Gallipoli, he developed septicaemia from a mosquito bite and died on 23 April, on a hospital ship off the Greek island of Skyros.