Further exploration of the work of many of the poets represented in the Hormel Center's collections leads to the Book Arts and Special Collections Center, where rare, fine and small press books and little magazines are found.
Robert Duncan
Faust Foutu
Stinson Beach, Ca.: Enkidu
Surrogate, 1960
In 1957, the openly gay poet Jack Spicer’s "Poetry as
Magic Workshop" was sponsored by the Poetry Center
at San Francisco State College. The successful workshop
evolved into a weekly gathering of poets, artists, university
professors, and students. After a reading one night,
Spicer suggested to Joe Dunn that he start a small press
to publish the work of the emerging San Francisco poets.
Dunn took a four-week course in printing and founded The
White Rabbit Press. The first book he published was After
Lorca by Jack Spicer, with a cover design by Jess Collins,
known as Jess.
Jack Spicer
After Lorca
San Francisco: White Rabbit Press, 1957
From 1957–1968, The White Rabbit Press published sixtythree
books and ten broadsides. It was the primary
publisher of the work of Spicer, Robin Blaser, and
Robert Duncan—the three central figures of the literary
movement first known as the Berkeley Renaissance, and
later as the San Francisco Renaissance. The Cat and the
Blackbird, by Robert Duncan with drawings by Jess, was
published in 1967. (Duncan and Jess had met in 1951, and
were a couple until Duncan’s death in 1988.)
In 1952, Duncan, Jess, and the artist Harry Jacobus founded King Ubu Gallery, one of San Francisco’s first alternative spaces for artists and poets. Two years later, it closed and reopened as the Six Gallery. Here, in 1955, as part of a group reading, Allen Ginsberg read in public for the first time—premiering "Howl" in an incendiary performance. The Book Arts and Special Collections Center possesses Ginsberg's work Wichita Vortex Sutra, published in 1966, by San Francisco’s Coyote Press.