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A Proposal for the Celebration of the Bicentenary of the French Revolution / Finlay, Ian Hamilton., 1989

 Item
Identifier: CC-10985-11198

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Scope and Contents

The proposal printed in large red letters on the inside of the card reads, "A Revolution." Roe & Moore WEB 2016 for "A collection of letters and cuttings relating to the cancelled commission for a garden to commemorate the bi-centenary of the French revolution. From the collection of Douglas Maxwell" priced the collection at $836 thst included a single typed, signed letter by Finlay thereby valuing a signed Finlay letter between $400-$500. A typed letter from Ian Hamilton Finlay, signed Ian ink, dated 29.5.88 on his Little Sparta/Raspberry Republic headed paper. Gives an outline of the whole affair and denoujnces his detractors in pungent language; 'One also wonders whether these people have ever encountered an actual anti-Semite or Nazi. Sue and I have worked hard, and endured much; for the last thirty years; to achieve what we have To be denounced by people who are relatively youthful, who have never been hungry, who have incomes and security and whose lives have been-in short-peaches and cream, fills us with fury. These people have never been occupied by anything save their own complacency and greed.' . With a photocopy of the Michael Scmidt article in The Time Literary Supplement, May 27-2nd June 1988 on the same sheet is a copy of the question asked in commons by his M.P. Mr. Jimmy Hood on Wednesday 8th June (1988). With a copy of a two page letter from Professeur Francis Edeline to M. Michel Blum Président de la Ligue des Droits de l'homme, defending Finlay. Copy of three page essay by Thomas A. Clark 'Interviewers and Critics, Barbarism and Culture; A Reading of Ian Hamilton Finlay's OSSO. Copy of a two page letter from Ian Hamilton Finlay to Gerald Kaufman , the Secretary of State for the Arts, dated 23.5.88, giving an outline of the affair and defending his position. Copy of a letter from Martin Lev of M.E.Action Campaign to Catherine Millet of Art Press, Paris. A letter typed, signed and annotated in ink, from Sue Finlay to Douglas Maxwell, reporting back on a trip to Paris where she has had interview with her lawyers and with Dominique Bozo of the Ministry of Culture, the letters begs Maxwell to employ all possible means to raise awareness of the situation and reply to the attacks made on her and Ian. A copy of the review of the affair given by Duncan MacMillan , Director of Edinburgh University's Talbot Rice Art Centre 'Enough to make Thomas Paine weep', published in the Scotsman, Monday May 23, 1988. Two copies of the letter written by Ian nad Sue Finlay to The Scotsman, published May 24 1988 -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates

  • Creation: 1989

Creator

Extent

0 See container summary (1 folded card) ; 12 x 11 cm

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Physical Location

box shelf

Custodial History

The Sackner Archive of Concrete and Visual Poetry, on loan from Ruth and Marvin A. Sackner and the Sackner Family Partnership.

General

Published: Little Sparta, Dunsyre Lanark, Scotland : Committee of Public Safety; Wild Hawthorn Press. Nationality of creator: Scottish. General: Number of duplicates: 1. General: Added by: CONV; updated by: RUTH.

Repository Details

Part of the The Ruth and Marvin Sackner Archive of Concrete and Visual Poetry Repository

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