Below are a few websites, publishers, books and journals that represent the kind of work I am considering in this project.
- Ink Sweat and Tears – a UK-based webzine that publishes word & image pieces alongside other poetry and prose.
- Against the Grain – an innovative UK small poetry press, specialising in poetry pamphlets with particular attention to design.
- Hercules Editions – an independent press that publishes poetry and prose combined with art and archival material.
- Fieldmouse Press / SOLRAD – a US-based independent publisher of experimental and non-mainstream comics, including poetry comics. SOLRAD is an online literary magazine published by Fieldmouse Press.
- Popshot – an illustrated literary magazine that publishes short stories, flash fiction, and poetry.
- Over the Line (2015) – an anthology of poetry comics published by Sidekick Books.
- Ink Brick – a US-based micro-press dedicated to comics poetry. Published the Ink Brick journal from 2014 to 2020.
- Solipsistic Pop – a UK-based publisher and anthology series of alternative comics.
- Volume Poetry – an online poetry journal, which also publishes artist/poet collaborations and work by poets-as-artists.
- Guillemot Press – a publisher of poetry pamphlets and collections with a particular focus on book design and illustration. Several of their publications have won the Michael Marks Award for Illustration in a Poetry Pamphlet.
Some books, articles and other resources that discuss the relationship between poetry and visual art, and other relevant topics for this project:
- The Dialogue between Painting and Poetry: Livres d’Artistes 1874 – 1999, edited by Jean Khalfa (Black Apollo, 2001)
- The Art of Collaboration: Poets, Artists, Books, edited Anca Cristofovici & Barbara Montefalcone (Cuneiform Press, 2015)
- A Poetics of the Press: Interviews with Poets, Printers, & Publishers, edited by Kyle Schlesinger (Cuneiform Press & Ugly Duckling Presse, 2021)
- ‘The Art Of Illustration’, article on the Poetry School website.
- ‘Should Poetry Books Have Images in Them?’, article in Letter Review.