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artie
                                        Photo: Geof Isherwood

[Above] Artie Gold with friend, poet and publisher Endre Farkas, outside The Word Bookstore, Montreal, 1990.

One of Canada's finest poets died on St. Valentine's Day, 2007. Gold, an honoured disassociate member of the Véhicule poets died peacefully after a long battle with emphysema and with most of the world. From those of us who loved you and your small & mean ways and your grand and tender gestures, and most of all, you and your poems, love.

...I delight in the sun, it is monumental in the sky with certainty rising, setting looking to the greater cycle, there is colour, a yellow angel pedals about the world."

The Montreal Gazette, 
February 17th, 2007

 

A memorial gathering & reading for Artie Gold took place Saturday April 14th, 7:30pm, at The Word Bookstore.

 

Visit the links below to learn more about Artie Gold:

"Artie's Gone" ~ Endre Farkas

Stephen Morrissey: a Tribute to Artie

The Véhicule Poets Remember Artie Gold

In Memoriam: Artie Gold [with photograph]

Fifteen Photographs of Artie Gold's Apartment

Jack Ruttan's Utopia Moment

Brian Campbell On Artie Gold's Memorial

Out of the Woodwork

R.W. Watkins ~ Literary Kicks

An Artie Gold Poem ~ Brian Campbell

Writing in Canada

"Artie Gold's Allergies" ~ by rob mcclennan
[scroll down]

"Sex at 31"

Eyewear ~ Todd Swift

The Infamous Véhicule Poets ~ Ken Norris

Backyard Disciples

Lumpy Onion Monophony [keep scrolling down]

The Beautiful Chemical Waltz ~ purchase here

 


   

 

A Photograph of Artie Gold

 

a poem by Sonja A. Skarstedt

The sun spins halos in the sky
and birds hover like logos
over your shoulder
one April afternoon
thirty years ago.

In the scheme of things perfectly contained

a tripped-out Pan in sandals
leftover winter
dances on your lips
your silhouette
turns pirouettes
tunes in
the beautiful chemical waltz

inside a greening knoll
your twig-toed radius
pre-ordained as the seasons
the cross-legged pulse of students
escape from the stasis of class
still-baking dreams
and other crazy emblems
rolling like dice on a picnic spread.

Is my life indeed that which is slowing progress

effortless as a photograph
one hand’s commentary
on the variety of breezes
only April can find

I am surfer at 12 o’clock high

your mission
to ruffle the earth’s coiffure
the slow-motion pastoral of books
until your brevity of spirit
sets logic adrift
on non-scholarly waves
      mercury will slide
            rush up our bodies
the smallest shaft of light where
the women of the city
break my heart

till even the clouds
cohere to your nucleus
      when the air
      was silent as a leaf
stanzas skimmed from nimbus paragraphs like rainy predilections
cats gone awry and

o’hara died like christ

your anticipatory cackle
more a pounce
than a nuance

I stuck a paintbrush in my eye
and it sparkled like Jack Frost

more tactile than tundra in June
freewheeling through meadows of days and days to come

before you flutter off
heartier than gold
to join the cirrus
of departing dandelions.

 

 

The italicized portions of this poem are lines from Artie Gold’s poems (The Beautiful Chemical Waltz: Selected Gold. The Muses’ Company, 1992).



 

The Real Thing:
Artie Gold, Poet 


ENDRE FARKAS

Published: Saturday, April 07, 2007 
The Montreal Gazette


Artie Gold, one of Canada's finest poets, died on St. Valentine's Day. Gold, a member of the Vehicule Poets, died peacefully after a long battle with emphysema and most of the world. 

Born in 1947 in Brockville, Ont., Artie Gold, had been a presence on the Montreal poetry scene for over 30 years and even if he could not get around much in the last 10 years, his spirit still bicycled around the town he loved. He loved to roam the alleys in the middle of the night collecting the hidden value and beauty in other people's discard. He collected and displayed these, the world's knick-knacks, on his shelves, tables, in baggies and in his poems: 

I have knapsacks full of knick-knacks 

that spread beneath a tree 

would suffocate a hermit 

                                                   (Untitled) 


He prowled the night like his many cats; the cats he loved but who in return gave him not affection but allergies. He haunted all-night joints for that forever midnight connection, the conversations that went everywhere and forever. Many of us knew that when the phone rang too late for sleep it was Artie, the Gold, the Goldie, with an invitation to join him on these adventures or to listen to a quick poem he had just scribbled and had to share. 

I've known Artie since the early '70s. And although we were in our mid-20s, he already had a reputation among poets as a "poet," the real thing. I first heard him read at The Karma Coffee House (like Artie, now gone). He amazed me with his wicked sense of phrasing, imagery and, later, when he showed me some of his already hundreds of poems, with his eccentric line breaks, frustrating spacing and punctuation. For these, and for everything else he wrote, he always had a perfectly, golden reason. 

Along with Ken Norris, we were the original poetry editors of Vehicule Press, although he considered himself the "disassociate" editor. He and I ran the Vehicule reading series in the early '70s. He was the disassociate host and when we started the mimeographed magazine Mouse Eggs, he contributed the name, some poems and his disassociation. And though he was always disassociating, he always believed in poetry as a noble obsession and in supporting the development of a vital and hip poetry scene. 

George Bowering, Canada's first poet laureate, who knew Artie well, wrote of him: "I knew that he was serious about poetry. He was not interested in getting famous or expressing his uniqueness or preparing himself for a job teaching creative writing. Artie never chased any kind of job very hard. What keeps coming through his poetry is his learning, his engaged reading of the avant garde. Since his first poems Gold has always shown taste. 


'So many things remind me of you 

The birth of Christ: Georges de la Tour (around 1633) 

page 126 of Art News Annual/1955: the repentant Magdalene 

a nude Kirchner painted. A Matisse 

something by Berthe Morisot 

. . .things Picasso was fond of saying. . .' 


Artie wanted to live in a world populated by such figures. For him culture was not that thing the vulgarizing anthropologists have made it, whatever society makes and does. Culture was what our artists refined." 

Artie Gold wrote. And although he published only six books, his published works were just the tip of the tip of the iceberg. Artie was always writing - on his manual Underwood, on the back of cigarette packs, on napkins, on the wall, on postcards to himself and to the rest of the world. He also sketched, sketches of the moment, the moment of a moment, like his poems, whose phrases and unsentimental melancholia left a permanent impression on your mind and in your heart. He and his poems made you realize that poetry, contrary to popular opinion, did matter. 

Artie Gold was a poet who was sure of what he was. He paid rent in Fort Poetry. He, a wheezing asthmatic in the world, had such breadth in his poems that he could leave you breathless and wondering "how did he do that?" There was a Bach-like complexity mixed with a Rube Goldberg playfulness in his poems. His poems were city flowers growing between the cracks of this concrete island at the strangest and most arresting angles. 

Artie did not conduct a particularly safe life. He took chances in life and in his art, which to him were one and the same. And though he wrote: 


I will hitch-hike out of here one day 

with my hair in my eyes and a good breeze blowing 

and cause a little confusion I'm sure-- 

though no more than a hair 

discovered in a gravy 

(Untitled) 


I disagree. Artie was more than a hair in the gravy, more like a pain in the heart. No picnic, Artie. Artie irritated life. He was engaged in the art of living with its urgencies and pleasures: on the turntable, Bach, on bookshelves, arranged by the architect of unsentimental sadness, the detectives of mysteries and the eccentrics of poetry. He was the cityflower growing the way his few remaining strands of hair, always about to fly off. Artie, always a cat on a high wire fence, always with a poem, insisting to be let in but only on his terms, even if only to ransack your fridge and point to something beautiful, to something missing in your life. 

Now, free of the allergies of this world, Artie, in the middle of winter, out on the balcony, a last cigarette, on the last train pulling out of town, on St. Valentine's Day, like a made-up mind, is off. 

There will be a memorial gathering and reading Saturday, April 14, 2007, at The Word Bookstore, 469 Milton Ave. 514-845-5640. 


Endre Farkas is a poet and playwright. 


Books By Artie Gold:

Cityflowers 

Delta, 1974 

Even yr photograph looks afraid of me 

Talon Books 1975 

Mixed Doubles (with Geoff Young) 

The Figures 1975 

Five Jockey Poems 

1977 

Some of the Cat Poems 

Crosscountry Press, 1978 

before Romantic Words 

Vehicule Press, 1979 

The Beautiful Chemical Waltz 

The Muses' Company, 1992 

Hotel Victoria 

Poems above/ground press, 2003