Hera Lindsay Bird In the book, Bird mines the absurdity and humour of sincerity and irony. The texts start at opposing ends, before meeting and muddling in the middle, decked out in a spray of Heldane in rainbow glitter.
âI've always been interested in the relationship between sincerity and irony in literature. Sometimes it's impossible to tell where one ends and the other begins,â Bird says. âPeople talk about them like theyâre contradicting forces, but I love the grey area in-between, where the mutations occur. I still don't really know what irony is. Is that ironic? Probably not.â
Of the collaboration, Bird says, âIt was really exciting to work on something outside the scope of poetry. I have always loved the quick brown fox AND the lazy dog he jumped over, so it was great fun to create a text where the typeface was the central focus and things like punctuation, font size and italicisation took on greater import.â
While Bird has sought poetic motivation in romantic literary heroes and â90s pop culture (e.g. John Keats, immortalised in âKeats is dead so fuck me from behindâ, and Monica Geller from Friends, âone of the worst characters in the history of televisionâ), Sowersbyâs starting point for Heldane were the Renaissance typefaces of Hendrik van den Keere, Claude Garamont, Robert Granjon and Simon de Colines.
âHeldane is a hybrid, a bastard, a fabrication,â Sowersby says. âI vultured my way through history, picking the bones from old fonts to make something new. I hesitate to call it original, but it is new. I used to say Heldane is âmy Garamondâ as a shorthand explanation, despite having very little to do with Garamontâs work. But itâs very much in the garalde genre. Iâve drawn fuzzy golden threads from his contemporaries to weave my own texture.â
Genres:
Poetry
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