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Draft:Raymond Foye

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  • Comment: The references you have added do not materially address the concern. For example, this one is a first person interview; this one just has his name as contributing to a book and this one is the same. References need to provide significant coverage about the person. It's quality that counts, not lots of references that contain little or no relevant content. MarcGarver (talk) 14:52, 19 June 2024 (UTC)

Raymond Foye[edit]

https://www.raymondfoye.info/
Raymond Foye, San Francisco 1977

Raymond Foye (b. 1957, Lowell, Massachusetts) is a writer, curator, editor and publisher.

Early life and education[edit]

Between 1974-1978 Foye studied at Philadelphia College of Art (film studies with Lewis Jacobs), the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (film studies with Stan Brakhage), and the San Francisco Art Institute (photography with Linda Connor and film studies with George Landow). From 1978-80 he worked as a literary editor with City Lights Books where he edited The Unknown Poe (1980), described by the publisher as ”an indispensable anthology of brilliant hard-to-find writings by Poe on poetry, the imagination, humor, and the sublime which adds a new dimension to his stature as a speculative thinker and philosopher.” [1] The anthology includes essays (in translation) by Charles Baudelaire, Stéphane Mallarmé, J. K. Huysmans, Paul Valéry, & André Breton, that shed light on Poe’s relevance within European literary tradition. Foye also collaborated with Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Nancy Joyce Peters on Literary San Francisco (City Lights, 1981), and collaborated with poet Philip Lamantia on a new edition of the poems of Samuel Greenberg. Foye was the teaching assistant to Lamantia during the summer session of 1979 at the San Francisco Art Institute.

During his years in San Francisco, Foye shared an apartment at 28 Harwood Alley (now Bob Kaufman Alley) with poet Neeli Cherkovski, who would become a lifelong friend. Their apartment in the North Beach neighborhood was a gathering place for the many poets and writers. Foye and Cherkovski co-edited two issues (Nos 29 & 30) of Beatitude magazine. Foye was a contributor to the punk zine Search and Destroy under the pseudonym Ray Rumour (his interview with William Burroughs appeared on the cover of the final issue, No. 10). While attending the San Francisco Art Institute he promoted concerts with The Dils, The Avengers, The Mutants, and the Dead Kennedys.

Career[edit]

His close friendship with the poet Bob Kaufman resulted in his editing Kaufman’s final book of poems in the poet’s lifetime, The Ancient Rain (New Directions, 1981) which contained a sheaf of recent poems by Kaufman that Foye rescued from the poet's burnt out room at the Dante Hotel on Broadway and Grant Avenue. Foye's friendship with and extensive research on the Boston poet John Wieners resulted in his editing two volumes of Wieners’ work for Black Sparrow Press, Selected Poems 1958-1984[2], and Cultural Affairs in Boston: Poetry and Prose 1956-1985[3]. These works were essential in preserving Wieners’ work and reestablishing his significant reputation as an important post war poet.

In 1980 Foye moved permanently to New York City, where he first worked at Petersburg Press (London & New York) supervising fine art print projects and trade book editions with the artists Robert Motherwell, Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, David Hockney, Howard Hodgkin, Frank Stella, and Francesco Clemente. From 1980-1989 he edited over a dozen publications with David Hockney, including Looking at Pictures in a Book (National Gallery, London, 1981), David Hockney Photographe—Hockney’s first photography publication (and exhibition) at the Centre Pompidou in 1982, and Cameraworks (Alfred Knopf, 1984).In 1985 he traveled to India with Francesco Clemente and lived in Madras (Chennai), where they founded the small press Hanuman Books. Foye traveled extensively in India, and in Madras studied at the Theosophical Society, the Krishnamurti Foundation, and the Krishnamacharya Yoga Mandiram.

From 1985-95 Foye and Clemente edited and published fifty books in the Hanuman Books series, printing the books in India and maintaining offices in New York’s Chelsea Hotel, where Foye has lived since 1980. Hanuman Books published original titles by authors such as Cookie Mueller, Eileen Myles, Bob Flanagan, Patti Smith, Robert Creeley, Robert Frank, Jack Kerouac, and many others. Hanuman Books were printed by C. T. Nachiappan at Kalakshetra Publications (Madras) in letterpress, and hand sewn with Pondicherry handmade paper covers and gold-stamped dust jackets. Originally retailing for $4.95 and $5.95, the books are now collectors items. Certain titles were reprinted in 2023 and 2024 by Hanuman Editions, a project which Foye is not associated with.

From 1985-1990 he worked on numerous independent publishing projects and exhibitions and co-authored (with Ann Percy) Francesco Clemente: Three Worlds (Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1990)[4]. He was the photography curator to Allen Ginsberg, and worked extensively on publications and exhibitions with writer and curator Henry Geldzahler, whose papers he catalogued and curated for the Beinecke Library at Yale University.

From 1990-95 he worked as director of exhibitions and publications at Gagosian Gallery in New York, organizing exhibitions and catalogues with numerous artists, including Cy Twombly, Richard Serra, James Rosenquist, Ed Ruscha, Carl Andre, David Salle, Philip Taaffe, and Elyn Zimmerman. Since 1995 he has worked as an independent curator, editor and writer. His show The Heavenly Tree Grows Downward (James Cohan Gallery, New York)[5] was the first exhibition to feature the artworks of legendary filmmaker, folklorist and occultist Harry Everett Smith, and was named one of the ten best exhibitions of 2002 by the New York Times (Holland Cotter)[6]. He has organized exhibitions with numerous galleries worldwide, including Planthouse New York, Galerie Jablonka Berlin and Cologne, Thomas Ammann Fine Art Zurich, Studio Raffaelli Trento, and Tobias Mueller Modern Art, Zurich. His is the manager of the estate of painter and filmmaker Jordan Belson, on whom he has written extensively. Foye has organized three exhibitions of Belson's art for Matthew Marks Gallery in New York (2019, 2022, and 2024)[7], and he is currently preparing a comprehensive monograph on Belson’s work.r

Foye is the literary executor of the Estates of poets John Wieners, James Schuyler, Gregory Corso, and Rene Ricard. He recently co-edited (with Neeli Cherkovski and Tate Swindell) The Collected Poems of Bob Kaufman for City Lights Books (2019)[8], and co-edited with George Scrivani the posthumous Gregory Corso: The Golden Dot, Last Poems 1997-2000 (Lithic Press). Foye contributed extensive introductory essays to both volumes. In 2019 his imprint Raymond Foye Books published Selected Poems by Eric Walker, a latter-day Beat poet of San Francisco who died in prison at the age of twenty-nine. Foye is currently preparing a comprehensive Collected Poems by Rene Ricard, and a new edition of John Wieners’ classic 1975 book Behind the State Capitol. He is presently a contributing editor to the Brooklyn Rail[9], and from 2017-2020 served as an advisor to the Bob Dylan Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

He is a regular contributor to Gagosian Quarterly[10], and in 2020 received the American Book Award for editing the Collected Poems of Bob Kaufman. His extensive body of writings on art, film, poetry, and popular music can be found at www.raymondfoye.info

  1. ^ "The Unknown Poe | City Lights Booksellers & Publishers". Retrieved 2024-06-18.
  2. ^ Wieners, John (1986). Selected poems, 1958-1984. Internet Archive. Santa Barbara : Black Sparrow Press. ISBN 978-0-87685-662-8.
  3. ^ Wieners, John (1988). Cultural affairs in Boston : poetry & prose 1956-1985. Internet Archive. Santa Rosa : Black Sparrow Press. ISBN 978-0-87685-739-7.
  4. ^ "Francesco Clemente: Three Worlds". Goodreads. Retrieved 2024-06-18.
  5. ^ "The Heavenly Tree Grows Downward - Harry Smith, Philip Taaffe, and Fred Tomaselli - Exhibitions - James Cohan". www.jamescohan.com. Retrieved 2024-06-18.
  6. ^ "'The Heavenly Tree Grows Downward'". The New York Times. 2002-09-20. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-06-18.
  7. ^ "Jordan Belson | Matthew Marks Gallery". Jordan Belson | Matthew Marks Gallery. Retrieved 2024-06-18.
  8. ^ "Rain Unraveled Tales | Gagosian Quarterly".
  9. ^ "https://brooklynrail.org/contributor/raymond-foye". The Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved 2024-06-18. {{cite web}}: External link in |title= (help)
  10. ^ "Raymond Foye | Contributors | Gagosian Quarterly". Gagosian. 2024-05-31. Retrieved 2024-06-18.