Spike Island’s fourth book and zine fair brought together international independent publishers, designers and collectives whose work focuses on experimental design and literature.
Participants included:
- An Endless Supply
- B.Books
- Bedford Press
- Book Works
- Bronze Age Editions
- City Edition Studio
- Colin Sackett/UniformBooks
- Copy
- Eastside Projects
- Foyles
- Hato Press
- Hyphen Press
- Influx Press
- Laydeez do Comics
- Library of Independent Exchange
- Mule Press
- Museums Press
- Nom de Strip
- Penned in the Margins
Spike Associates Reading area:
- Åbäke
- AND Publishing
- APFEL
- Sophie Dutton
- Natalie Ferris
- Gratuitous Type
- James Langdon
- Teller
- Weng Nam Yap
Special book launches included:
- BookWorks: Again, A Time Machine: from distribution to archive, edited by Gavin Everall and Jane Rolo
- Bedford Press: Public Occasion Agency 1–22, edited by Jan Nauta and Scrap Marshall
- Bedford Press: fm-scenario – Where Palms Stand – Mask – Delay, Eran Schaerf, edited by Joerg Franzbecker and Herbert Kapfer
- Mule Press: Showhome: Housing Developments of the South West, William Teakle
To accompany the fair, Spike Island also presented a series of short talks, performances and readings by artists and writers. Alongside these were a rare exhibition of works by Modernist printer Desmond Jeffery and a temporary studio where Spike Island-based designer Jono Lewarne worked with students from the University of the West of England throughout the day to produce a printed publication.
Schedule
12–5pm: Book and Zine Fair
1pm: I Am Dora
Claire Huss discusses the project I am Dora, a publication, online visual story and series of film screenings that explore how women’s perceptions of themselves are affected by female characters in film.
1.15pm: Hyphen Press
Robin Kinross gives a short presentation focusing on the second edition of Norman Potter’s book What is a Designer – his reason for becoming a book publisher.
2pm: Luke Kennard
Kennard reads from The Neropolis Boat (Holdfire Press), forthcoming poetry collection, A Lost Expression (Salt), and from recent science fiction novella, Holophin (Penned in the Margins).
2.15pm: Patrick Coyle
Coyle delivers readings originating from a recent series of small sculptures. Using the sculptures as mnemonic devices, the artist considers how a performance may be both scripted and documented using the same object.
2.30pm: Samuel Hasler
Hasler reads from a work-in-progress, a prayerbook that is influenced by autobiography, film noir and art history.
6pm: Holly Corfield-Carr
The author reads a selection from her current project, Asterisms.
6.20pm: Marie Toseland
The Demise is a body of work incorporating image, text and objects. For this event, it is staged as a performance featuring a reading and projected images.
Followed by the launch of the Risograph print publication created by Jono Lewarne and design students from the University of the West of England.