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Guy Mattison Davenport (November 23, 1927 –
January 4, 2005) was an American writer, translator, illustrator, painter, intellectual, and teacher.
Life
Guy Davenport was born in Anderson, South Carolina,
in the foothills of Appalachia on November 23, 1927. His father
was an agent for the Railway Express Agency.
Davenport said that he became a reader only at age ten, with a
neighbor’s gift of one of the Tarzan series.[1] At age
eleven, he began a neighborhood newspaper, drawing all the
illustrations and writing all the stories.[2] At age
thirteen, he "broke [his] right leg (skating) and was laid up for a
wearisome while"; it was then that he began "reading with real
interest",[3]
beginning with a biography of Leonardo.[4] He left
high school early and enrolled at Duke University a few weeks after his
seventeenth birthday.[5] At
Duke, he studied art[6](with Clare Leighton),
graduating with a degree in classics and English literature.
Davenport was a Rhodes Scholar at Merton College, Oxford, from
1948 to 1950. He studied Old English under J. R. R.
Tolkien and wrote Oxford’s first thesis on James Joyce. In 1950,
upon his return to the United States, Davenport was drafted into
the U.S.
Army for two years, spending them at Fort
Bragg in the 756th Field Artillery, then in the XVIII Airborne Corps. After the army, he
taught at Washington University in
St. Louis until 1955, when he began earning a Ph.D. at Harvard,
studying under Harry
Levin and Archibald MacLeish.
Davenport befriended Ezra Pound during the poet’s incarceration
in St. Elizabeths Hospital,
visiting him annually from 1952 until Pound's release in 1958, and
later at his home in Rapallo, Italy. Davenport described one such visit, in
1963, in the story "Ithaka". Davenport wrote his dissertation on
Pound’s poetry, published as Cities on Hills in 1983.
After completing his Ph.D., he taught at Haverford
College from 1961 to 1963 but soon took a position at the University of Kentucky, "the
remotest offer with the most pay" (as he wrote to Jonathan Williams). Davenport
taught at Kentucky until he received a MacArthur Fellowship, which prompted his
retirement at the end of 1990.
Davenport was married briefly in the early 1960s.[7] He
dedicated Eclogues, 1981, to "Bonnie Jean" (Cox), his
companion from 1965[8] until
his death.[9] Other
Davenport volumes dedicated to Cox include Objects on a
Table, 1998, and The Death of Picasso, 2004. Cox
became Trustee for the Guy Davenport Estate.[10]
The range of Davenport's literary and artistic friendships was
remarkable. In addition to Pound and Williams, Davenport knew Hugh Kenner, Laurence
Scott, Louis
Zukofsky, Samuel Beckett, Christopher Middleton, Thomas Merton, Wendell Berry, Buckminster
Fuller, Eudora
Welty, Samuel R. Delany, Robert
Kelly, James
Laughlin, Allen Ginsberg, Stan Brakhage, Ronald
Johnson, and Ralph Eugene Meatyard, his
neighbor.
Two sentences he wrote about Meatyard apply to himself as well:
"He was rare among American artists in that he was not obsessed
with his own image in the world. He could therefore live in perfect
privacy in a rotting Kentucky town."[11]
Davenport bought Oscar Mayer bologna, fried it, and ate it with
Campbell's soup[12].
He died of lung
cancer on January 4, 2005.
Writing
Davenport began publishing fiction in 1970 with "The Aeroplanes
at Brescia," which is based
on Kafka's visit to
an air show in September 1909. His books include Tatlin!,
Da
Vinci's Bicycle, Eclogues, Apples and Pears,
The Jules Verne
Steam Balloon, The Drummer of the Eleventh North Devonshire Fusiliers, A Table of Green
Fields, The Cardiff
Team, and Wo es war, soll ich werden. His fiction
uses three general modes of exposition: the fictionalizing of
historical events and figures; the foregrounding of formal
narrative experiments, especially with the use of collage; and the depicting of a
Fourierist
utopia, where small groups of
men, women, and children have eliminated the separation between
mind and body.
The first of more than four hundred Davenport essays, articles,
introductions, and book reviews appeared while he was still an
undergraduate; the last, just weeks before his death. Davenport was
a regular reviewer for National Review and The Hudson
Review, and, late in his life, at the invitation of John
Jeremiah Sullivan, he spent a year writing the "New Books"
column for Harper's Magazine. His essays range
from literary to social topics, from brief book reviews to lectures
such as the title piece in his first collection of essays, The
Geography of the Imagination. His other collections of essays
were Every Force Evolves a Form and The Hunter Gracchus
and Other Papers on Literature and Art.
He also published two slim volumes on art: A Balthus Notebook and
Objects on a Table. Although he wrote on many topics,
Davenport, who never had a driver's license, was especially
passionate about the destruction of American cities by the
automobile.
Davenport published a handful of poems. The longest are the
book-length Flowers and Leaves, an intricate meditation on
art and America, and "The Resurrection in Cookham Churchyard" (borrowing the title from a
painting by Stanley Spencer). A selection of his
poems and translations was published as Thasos and Ohio.
Davenport translated ancient Greek texts, particularly from the archaic period. These were published in
periodicals, then small volumes, and finally collected in 7
Greeks. He also translated the occasional other piece,
including a few poems of Rilke's, some ancient Egyptian
texts [after Boris de Rachewiltz]), and, with Benjamin
Urrutia, the sayings of Jesus, published as The Logia of Yeshua.
Visual
art
With his childhood newspaper, Davenport launched both his
literary and artistic vocations. The former remained dormant or
sporadic for some time while the latter, "making drawings,
watercolors, and gouaches,
[continued] throughout school, the army, and his early years as a
teacher."[13] He
drew or painted nearly every day of his life,[14] and
his notebooks contain drawings and pasted-in illustrations and
photos cheek by jowl with his own observations and other writings
and quotations from others.
From college forward, Davenport supplied cover art and
decorations to literary periodicals. He also supplied illustrations
for others' books, notably two by Hugh Kenner: The Stoic Comedians
(1962) and The Counterfeiters (1968). [15]
The cover of Apples and Pears by
Guy Davenport
As a visual artist (and childhood newspaper magnate) who also
wrote, Davenport had a lifelong interest in printing and book
design. His poems and fictions were often first published in limited editions by small press
craftsmen.[16]
In 1965 Davenport and Laurence Scott prepared and printed
Pound's Canto CX in an edition of 118 copies, 80 of which they
presented to Pound for his 80th birthday. The previous year they
had produced Ezra's Bowmen of Shu on the same press, a double broadside that
published for the first time, with a brief introductory essay by
Davenport, a drawing by sculptor Henri Gaudier-Brzeska and a
letter of Gaudier's from the trenches of World War I that cites
Pound's poem (translated from one in the Shi Jing) "The Song of the Bowmen of Shu"[17].
Many of Davenport's earlier stories are combinations of pictures
and text, especially Tatlin! and Apples and Pears
(where some of the illustrations are of pages that resemble those
of his own notebooks).
"It was my intention, when I began writing fiction several years
ago, to construct texts that were both written and drawn. [ . . . ]
I continued this method right through Apples and Pears [ .
. . ]. The designer [of A+P] understood [my] collages to be
gratuitous illustrations having nothing to do with anything,
reduced them all to burnt toast, framed them with nonsensical
lines, and sabotaged my whole enterprise. I took this as final
defeat, and haven't tried to combine drawing and writing in any
later work of fiction."[18]
Works
Fiction
- Tatlin!: Six Stories (Scribner's,
1974) (with illustrations by Davenport)
- Da
Vinci's Bicycle: Ten Stories (University of Chicago Press,
1979) (with illustrations by Davenport)
- Eclogues: Eight
Stories (North Point Press, 1981) (two stories illustrated by
Roy Behrens)
- Trois Caprices (The Pace Trust, 1981) (three stories
later collected in The Jules Verne Steam Balloon)
- The Bowmen of Shu (The Grenfell Press, 1984)
(limited ed., collected in Apples and Pears)
- Apples and Pears and Other Stories (North Point Press,
1984) (with illustrations by Davenport)
- The Bicycle Rider (Red Ozier Press, 1985) (limited
ed., later collected—in a different version—in The Jules Verne
Steam Balloon)
- Jonah: A Story
(Nadja Press, 1986) (limited ed., later collected in The Jules
Verne Steam Balloon)
- The Jules
Verne Steam Balloon: Nine Stories (North Point Press,
1987)
- The Drummer of the Eleventh North Devonshire Fusiliers (North Point Press, 1990)
- The Lark (Dim Gray
Bar Press, 1993) (limited ed., illustrated by Davenport)
- A Table of Green Fields: Ten Stories (New Directions,
1993)
- The Cardiff Team: Ten Stories (New Directions,
1996)
- Twelve Stories (Counterpoint, 1997) (selections from
Tatlin!, Apples and Pears, and The Drummer of
the Eleventh North Devonshire Fusiliers)
- The Death of Picasso: New and Selected Writing
(Shoemaker and Hoard, 2003) (contains seven essays [three
previously uncollected] along with nineteen stories [two previously
uncollected] and one play)
- Wo es war, soll ich werden: The Restored Original Text
(Finial Press, 2004) (limited ed.) [1]
Translations
- Carmina Archilochi: The Fragments of Archilochos (University of California
Press, 1964)
- Sappho: Songs and
Fragments (University of Michigan Press, 1965)
- Herakleitos and Diogenes (Grey Fox Press,
1979)
- The Mimes of Herondas (Grey Fox Press, 1981)
- Maxims of the Ancient Egyptians (The Pace Trust, 1983)
(from Boris de Rachewiltz's Massime
degli antichi egiziani, 1954)
- Anakreon (The University of Alabama/
Parallel Editions, 1991)
- Archilochos,
Sappho, Alkman: Three Lyric Poets (University of
California Press, 1980) (adds Alkman to Carmina Archilochi
and Sappho: Songs and Fragments)
- The Logia of Yeshua: The Sayings of Jesus
(Counterpoint, 1996) (with Benjamin Urrutia)
- 7 Greeks (New Directions, 1995) (revises and collects
the texts—but none of Davenport's drawings—from Carmina
Archilochi, Sappho: Songs and Fragments,
Herakleitos and Diogenes, The Mimes of Herondas,
Anakreon, and Archilochos, Sappho, Alkman)
Poetry
- Cydonia Florentia (The Lowell-Adams House
Printers/Laurence Scott, 1966)
- Flowers and Leaves: Poema vel Sonata, Carmina Autumni
Primaeque Veris Transformationem (Nantahala
Foundation/Jonathan Williams, 1966; Bamberger Books, 1991)
(illustrated by Davenport)
- The Resurrection in Cookham Churchyard (Jordan Davies,
1982)
- Goldfinch Thistle Star (Red Ozier Press, 1983)
(illustrated by Lachlan Stewart)
- Thasos and Ohio: Poems
and Translations, 1950–1980 (North Point Press, 1986)
(includes most of Flowers and Leaves, along with
translations of six of the "7 Greeks" and of Rainer Maria
Rilke and Harold Schimmel)
Fugitive
pieces
Davenport wrote introductions or contributions to many
books:
- Jack Sharpless's Presences of Mind
- Stan
Brakhage's Film Biographies
- Will McBride's Coming
of Age
- Paul Cadmus's
The Drawings of Paul Cadmus (1989)
- Charles Burchfield's Charles
Burchfield's Seasons
- Simon Dinnerstein's Paintings and Drawings
- Anne Carson's
Glass, Irony, and God
- Jonathan Williams's
Palpable Elysium, Ear in Bartram's Tree,
Elite/Elate Poems, and tribute to Edward
Dahlberg
- Lenard D. Moore's Forever
Home
- Paul Metcalf's
Collected Works, Volume 1
- Jonathan Greene's tribute to Jonathan Williams,
JW/50
- Daniel Haberman's Lug of Days to Come
- Burton
Raffel's Pure Pagan: Seven Centuries of Greek Poems and
Fragments
- James
Laughlin's Man in the Wall
- Vladimir
Nabokov's Lectures on Don Quixote
- Ralph Eugene Meatyard's
Father Louie and Ralph Eugene Meatyard
- Aperture's monographs on Eudora Welty's and
Ralph Eugene Meatyard's photographs
- The University of Virginia's small
monograph on Lafcadio Hearn
- Charles L. Rubin's collection Junk Food (1980)
- Elizabeth Turner Hutton's Americans in Paris (1921–31): Man Ray, Gerald Murphy, Stuart Davis, and Alexander
Calder
- Riva Castleman's Art of the Forties
- Ronald
Johnson's Ark: The Foundations and Valley of
Many-Colored Grasses
- O. Henry's
Cabbages and Kings and Selected Stories (which he
also edited)
- Davenport's own selection of Louis Agassiz's scientific writings,
The Intelligence of Louis Agassiz.
Some of these pieces were included in Davenport's collections of
essays.
Commentary
and essays
- The Intelligence of Louis Agassiz (Beacon Press,
1963)
- Key-Indexed Study Guide to Homer's Iliad (Educational Research Associates,
1967)
- Key-Indexed Study Guide to Homer's Odyssey (Educational Research Associates,
1967)
- The Geography of the Imagination: Forty Essays. (North
Point Press, 1981)
- Cities on Hills: A Study of I - XXX of Ezra Pound's Cantos
(UMI Research, 1983)
- Charles Burchfield's Seasons
(Pomegranate Artbooks, 1994)
- The Drawings of Paul Cadmus (Rizzoli, 1989)
- Every Force Evolves a Form: Twenty Essays (North Point
Press, 1987)
- A Balthus
Notebook (The Ecco Press, 1989)
- The Hunter Gracchus and Other Papers on Literature and
Art (Counterpoint, 1996)
- Objects on a Table: Harmonious Disarray in Art and
Literature (Counterpoint, 1998)
Paintings
and drawings
- A Balance of Quinces:
The Paintings and Drawings of Guy Davenport, with an essay by
Erik Anderson Reece
(New Directions, 1996)
- 50 Drawings (Dim Gray Bar Press, 1996) (limited ed.)
Introduction by Davenport gives an account of the role drawing and
painting played in his life.
- Joan Crane's Davenport bibliography (see below) includes a
25-page insert of reproductions that suggest the range of his
drawing styles.
- Two books by Hugh
Kenner, The Counterfeiters and The Stoic
Comedians, include Davenport's crosshatched crow quill and ink
work, ten full-page drawings in each.
Letters
- A Garden Carried in a Pocket: Letters 1964–1968, ed.
Thomas Meyer (Green Shade, 2004). Selected correspondence with Jonathan Williams
- Fragments from a Correspondence, ed. Nicholas Kilmer
(ARION, Winter 2006, 89-129)
- Selected Letters: Guy Davenport and James
Laughlin, ed. W. C. Bamberger (W. W. Norton, 2007)
Criticism, reviews, and
interviews
- Alpert, Barry (ed.). "Guy Davenport / Ronald Johnson". VORT
9, 1976.
- Bawer, Bruce. "Wise guy". Bookforum, April 2005. [2]
- Cahill, Christopher. "Prose" (The Cardiff Team and
The Hunter Gracchus). Boston Review, April/May
1997.
- Cohen, Paul. "Art in the Soviet Union: Davenport's Visual
Critique in 'Tatlin!'". Mosaic, 1985.
- Cozy, David. "Knowledge as Delight / the fiction of Guy
Davenport", RainTaxi, Fall 2002.
- ———. "A Plain Modernist" (The Death of Picasso: New and
Selected Writing). The Threepenny Review, Summer
2004.
- ———. "Guy Davenport". The Review of Contemporary
Fiction, Fall 2005.
- Delany,
Samuel R.. "The 'Gay Writer' / 'Gay Writing'...?" in
Shorter Views: Queer Thoughts & the Politics of the
Paraliterary (Wesleyan University Press, 1999).
- Dillon, Patrick. "Dimensions of Erewhon: The Modern Orpheus in
Guy Davenport's 'The Dawn in Erewhon'". CUREJ: College
Undergraduate Research Electronic Journal (University of
Pennsylvania, 2006). [3]
- Dirda, Michael. "Guy Davenport," in Readings: Essays and
Literary Entertainments (W.W. Norton, 2000).
- Furlani, Andre. "A Postmodern Utopia Of Childhood Sexuality:
The Fiction Of Guy Davenport", in Curiouser: On the Queerness
of Children (University of Minnesota Press, 2004).
- ———. Guy Davenport: Postmodernism and After
(Northwestern University Press, 2007).
- Kelly, Robert. Interview on
Guy Davenport. The Brooklyn Rail, July 2005
- Mason, Wyatt.
"There Must I Begin to Be: Guy Davenport's Heretical Fictions".
Harper's Magazine, April 2004.
- Quartermain, Peter. "Writing as Assemblage / Guy Davenport" in
Disjunctive Poetics
(Cambridge University Press, 1992).
- Shannon, John (ed.). "A Symposium on Guy Davenport".
Margins 13, August-September 1974.
- Sullivan, John Jeremiah. "The
Art of Fiction CLXXIV: Interview with Guy Davenport". The Paris
Review 163, Fall 2002.
- Zachar, Laurence. "L'écriture de Guy Davenport, fragments et
fractals". Lille : A.N.R.T. Université de Lille III, 1996.
OCLC: 70116807. (Zachar's thesis is in French, but extensive
interview material and letters appear in English in an appendix,
426-488.)
Published
bibliography
- Crane, Joan. Guy Davenport: A Descriptive Bibliography,
1947–1995 (Green Shade, 1996).
Notes
- ^
Davenport, Guy. "On Reading." The Hunter Gracchus.
Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint, 1996. 19–20.
- ^
Davenport, Guy. A Balance of Quinces. New York: New Directions, 1996.
26.
- ^
Quartermain, Peter. "Writing as Assemblage / Guy Davenport" in
Disjunctive Poetics (Cambridge University Press, 1992). 167.
- ^
Davenport, Guy. "On Reading." The Hunter Gracchus.
Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint, 1996. 19–20.
- ^
Bamberger, W.C. introduction to Guy Davenport and James
Laughlin (W.W. Norton, 2007). ix.
- ^
Quartermain, Peter. "Writing as Assemblage / Guy Davenport" in
Disjunctive Poetics (Cambridge University Press, 1992). 167.
- ^
A Garden Carried in a Pocket: Letters 1964–1968, ed.
Thomas Meyer (Green Shade, 2004). 41.
- ^
A Garden Carried in a Pocket: Letters 1964–1968, ed.
Thomas Meyer (Green Shade, 2004). 52.
- ^
Guy Davenport obituary, New York Times. Christopher Lehmann-Haupt.
January 7, 2005. http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/07/books/07davenport.html
- ^
Kilmer, Nicholas. "Fragments from a Correspondence / Guy
Davenport." Arion. Winter, 2006. 129, footnote 57.
- ^
Davenport, Guy. "Ralph Eugene Meatyard." The Geography of the
Imagination. San Francisco: North Point, 1981. 371–2.
- ^
"The Anthropology of Table Manners from Geophagy Onward," The
Geography of the Imagination, p. 349
- ^
Davenport, Guy. A Balance of Quinces. New York: New
Directions, 1996. 26.
- ^
Davenport, Guy. A Balance of Quinces. New York: New
Directions, 1996. 26.
- ^
Heer, Jeet. The Comics Journal #278, October 2006. "Guy Davenport,
Cartoonist"
- ^
Crane, Joan. Guy Davenport: A Descriptive Bibliography,
1947–1995. Haverford: Green Shade, 1996. 95,96. (See also 24
unnumbered pages of drawings inserted between pages 184 and
185).
- ^
Song of the Bowmen of Shu - A
poem by Ezra Pound - American Poems
- ^
50 Drawings (Dim Gray Bar Press, 1996. Introduction.)
External
links