The University of Delaware Library

Special Collections Department


Charles Henri Ford
Letters to Ted Joans

1964 - 1987
(bulk dates 1964-1965, 1975-1987)

Manuscript Collection Number: 292
Accessioned: Purchase, 1993.
Extent: 55 items (.1 linear ft.)
Content: Letters, posters, brochures, announcements, clippings, and poems.
Access: The collection is open for research.
Processed: January 1994 by Anita A. Wellner.

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Table of Contents


Biographical Note

Charles Henri Ford

Poet, artist, film-maker, and editor, Charles Henri Ford was born on February 10, 1913, in Brookhaven, Mississippi. In 1929, having dropped out of high school, Ford began his literary career as co-editor, with Parker Tyler, of Blues: a magazine of new rhythms (1929-1930). Published in Columbus, Mississippi, this literary magazine showcased the new schools of modern art and literature, publishing such contemporary writers as Gertrude Stein, William Carlos Williams, Erskine Caldwell, Ezra Pound, and e. e. cummings.

By 1931 Charles Henri Ford had left the United States for France, the beginning of his world travels. During his first few years abroad, Ford wrote his only novel, the classic The Young and the Evil (Obelisk, 1933). Since that time, Ford has lived in Morocco, Italy, France, Crete, and New York City; and his poetry, films, and artwork have reflected his international travels and multicultural experiences.

From 1940 until 1947, Ford was editor and publisher of both the little magazine View and View editions. Published in New York, View featured the works of avant-garde American and European artists and writers, especially the surrealist artists.

View, recognized as one of the most important little magazines of the 1940s, bore covers designed by such artists are Man Ray, René Magritte, Marcel Duchamp, and Alexander Calder, and contained the prose, fiction, critical essays, stories, and art of Wallace Stevens, Edouard Roditi, Max Ernst, Lincoln Kirstein, William Carlos Williams, Paul Bowles, James T. Farrell, Marc Chagall, Jean-Paul Sartre, and Albert Camus.

In addition to his editorial achievements, Charles Henri Ford is a recognized poet and an accomplished artist. Since his first book of poetry, A Pamphlet of Sonnets (Caravel Press, 1936), more than fifteen collections of his poems have been published, including his latest volume Out of the Labyrinth: selected poems (City Lights, 1991). Ford, whose poetry reflects his fascination with words and his ability to interconnect them in imaginative ways, is regarded as America's first surrealist poet.

Charles Henri Ford is also a graphic artist, film-maker and photographer. His photography, paintings, and drawings have been exhibited in London, Paris, and New York. Frequently Ford's exhibitions have included collaborations with international craftsmen. For example, "The Kathmandu Experience" (New York Cultural Center, 1975) included sculptures in wood, embroideries in silk and appliques, all executed by Nepalese craftsmen from Ford's original designs; and his "An Operation Minotaur Manifestation" (The October Gallery, 1976) included the collages of Nepalese artists, Reepak Shakya and Indra Tamang.

Ford's motion pictures include Poem Posters (1966), which received the Fourth International Avant-Garde Film Festival Award in 1966, and Johnny Minotaur (1972).

Recently, Ford has continued to write and explore artistic expression in a variety of formats, while dividing his time among residences in Paris, France; Xania, Crete; and New York City.

Ted Joans

African-American poet, jazz musician, and surrealist painter Ted Joans was born July 4, 1938, in Cairo, Illinois. He received his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Indiana University in 1951.

Through his associations with Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, in Greenwich Village during the 1950s, Ted Joans has been identified as part of the Beat generation. In 1957, his first book of poetry, Beat Poems, was published by Deretchin, which also published his Funky Jazz Poems in 1959.

In the 1960s Joans became an expatriate, traveling the world, and later settling in Tangier, Morocco. Continuing to paint and write poetry, Joans has supported himself primarily through the sale of African artwork, which he has collected during his travels in Africa. Some of his African experiences are reflected in the poems in his Afrodisia: new poems (1971).

Joans was editor for Dies und Das (1984), the first surrealist magazine published in Germany, and has contributed to Black World, Coda Jazz Magazine, Jazz, and Presence Africaine.

In 1989 his works-in-progress included A Black Man Guides You to Africa, Spadework: the autobiography of a hipster, Niggers in Outer Space: a black power novel, and I Black Surrealist.

Sources:

May, Hal and Deborah A. Straub (eds.) Contemporary Authors. New Revision Series, Volume 25. Detroit: Gale Research Inc., 1989, pp. 237-237.

Metzger, Linda (ed.) Contemporary Authors. New Revision Series, Volume 13. Detroit: Gale Research Co., 1984. pp. 191-192.

Page, James A. and Jae Min Roh. Selected Black American, African and Caribbean Authors. Littleton, Colorado: Libraries Unlimited, Inc., 1985. p. 146.

Note: Biographical information is also derived from material in the collection.


Scope and Content Note

This collection of forty-six letters written by Charles Henri Ford to Ted Joans, dates from 1964 to 1987. In them Ford describes his extensive world travels and his varied artistic and writing projects.

Ford discusses his works-in-progress, including his collections of poetry, Spare Parts (Horizon Press, 1966), Om Krishna II (Cherry Valley Editions, 1981), and Om Krishna III (Red Ozier Press, 1982); and exhibitions of his work at the Cordier Edstrom Gallery (New York, 1965), the Robert Samuel Gallery (New York, 1980), and The October Gallery (New York, 1984).

Charles Henri Ford also mentions other projects, such as filming Johnny Minotaur, compiling Blues 10, editing on a new edition of his only novel, The Young and the Evil, and composing a book titled Double Exposures. Ford also apprises Joans of his travels and their mutual friends, mentions fellow poets Allen Ginsberg and Harold Norse, and conveys information and greetings from his companion, Nepalese collagist and photographer Indra Tamang.

The versos of some of the letters bear photocopies of collages (including images of Ford), an invitation to a party celebrating the publication of Om Krishna II, a review of Ford's film Johnny Minotaur, an article describing a New York party hosted by Ford, haikus written by Ford, a page from a play, and articles about Ford.

Envelopes occasionally bear block prints or pasted on cutouts and cartoons which form mini collages.

In addition to Ford's letters, this collection includes two notes from Ted Joans to Ford, one of which includes a poem written by Joans and dedicated to Ford. There are also several notes from Indra Tamang (enclosed in Ford's letters), a photocopied collage by Nepalese artist Reepak Shakya, two notes from Ruth Ford (Charles Henri Ford's sister) to Joans, and brochures for Ford's film, Johnny Minotaur, and a Paris museum.

The collection also includes a poster for Ford's exhibition, "Layouts and Camouflages," at the Robert Samuel Gallery (New York, 1980).

The letters are arranged in chronological order.

Related collections:

Ms 110 Archive of Pagany

Ms 294 Charles Henri Ford Archive Relating to Om Krishna II


Contents List

Folder -- Contents

F1   1964-1965

     1964 Apr 10         ACS           1p   
          Apr 23         ACS           1p  
          Jun 27         ACS           1p 
          Sep 24         ALS           1p
          Oct 8          TLS           1p
     1965 Feb 1          ACS           1p   
          Jun 8          ACS           1p   
          Nov 27         ALS           1p    


F2   1971-1976

     1971 Feb 15         ALS           1p 
               Note:  With ACS to Joans from Ford's sister Ruth.
     1972 Sep 5          ALS           1p
     1975 Feb 3          ACS           1p
          Dec 12         ACS           1p
     1976 Jan 20         ALS           1p
          May 17         ACS           1p
          Jul 6          ACS           1p 
          Sep 4          ACS           1p


F3   1978-1980

     1978 Jul 1          ALS           2p 
          Dec 2          TLS           2p
     1979 Oct 7          ACS           1p
     [1980 Jan 23]       ACS           1p 
     1980 Feb 8          ALS           1p  
               Note:  Enclosed is photocopy and ANS from Indra
               Tamang.
          Apr 15         ALS           2p 
          Jun 14         ANS           1p

     
F4   1981-1982
     
     1981 Aug 12         TCS           1p 
     1982 Apr 13         ALS           1p
          Apr 24         TLS           1p
               Note:  Verso bears photocopy haiku by Ford and the 
               autograph note: "artist's proof for Ted Joans
               chf."  Also includes a photocopy of a three line
               haiku. 
          Sep 1          TLS           1p
          Sep 17         ALS           1p 
          Dec 10         ANS           1p
               Note: With ANS from Indra and list of mail
               forwarded to Joans and Alicia Fritchle.
          Dec 31         ANS           1p  
               Note: Ford's brief note is on an ANS from Indra to 
               Joans listing forwarded mail.  Addressed to Joans
               and Alicia Fritchle.

 F5   1983-1984

     1983 Jun 28         ACS           1p 
               Note:  With ANS by Indra Tamang.
          Sep 13         ACS           1p
          Oct 3          ANS           1p
               Note:  On tear sheet from a Black Swan Press
               booklist.
          Oct 31         ALS           1p 
     1984 Dec 21         ACS           1p


F6   1985
     Includes a poem written by Joans and dedicated to Ford, with
     a TN from Joans.
     
     1985 Feb 16         ACS           1p
          Mar 12         ACS           1p
          Mar 20         ACS           1p
          Jul 2          ACS           1p
          Aug 20         ALS           1p
          Oct 18         ACS           1p 
          Oct 31         ACS           1p


F7   1986-1987
     Includes autograph note from Joans to Ford.
     
     1986 Jan 20         ALS           2p
          Mar 17         ACS           1p
          Aug 12         ALS           1p
          Oct 1          ALS           1p
          Dec [7]        Printed card  1p
     1987 Jun 21         ANS           1p
            Note:  Envelope bears AN possibly by Joans.
          Jul 7          ALS           1p 
            Note: Verso bears photocopy collage by Reepak. 
 
 
F8   [n.d.]
     Includes an ACS from Ruth Ford to Joans, brochures for
     Johnny Minotaur and the Musée de L'Assistance Publique
     Hôpitaux de Paris, a clipping, and two envelopes.

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