Sappho
ΨΑΠΦΟΙ [SAPPHO] is an artist book that conceptualizes the poetry of Sappho in a visual form, by “interpreting” the remaining 192 fragments of her oeuvre using abstract, minimalistic marks. The language of abstract marks captures the structure and preserves the flow of each fragment; it is a language that documents the presence or haunting absence of individual letters or words, a language that yields a unique visual representation for each fragment.
Sappho was a seventh-century B.C. Greek lyric poet from the island of Lesbos. Very little is left of Sappho’s poems and that in fragments of papyrus or parchment. The Library of Alexandria catalogued nine “books” scrolls of Sappho’s poems organized primarily by meter. it is assumed that all nine volumes might have contained 10000 lines of verse. However, only 650 lines of verse, 192 fragments remain. There is one complete poem, Fragment 1, and the newly discovered “Brother’s poem” while 124 fragments consist of less than ten words, twenty-one fragments are only one word long.
The book explores conceptual, scholarly, and visual design issues: what constitutes the best unit for translating Sappho’s fragments into abstract marks? Letters, syllables, words? how can we best capture and represent the internal rhythm and flow of each fragment? And how do we link the unique visual signature of each fragment back to the original text in ancient Greek, in the esoteric Aeolic dialect?
In a variable edition of three formats, white ink and a vintage ruling pen are used for mark-making on precious Gampi papers. The Usujo Gampi in particular, is an extinct treasure, no longer hand made. Numbers and sequencing of fragments follow the 1971 classical edition by Eva Maria Voigt, and the 2003 translation by Ann Carson, If not Winter: Fragments of Sappho. The numbers provide the link between the visual representation and the original text.
In the deluxe edition of Sappho, we find all 192 fragments, in 99 folios of Usujo Gampi. The standard edition (Sappho I) presents a subset of visually intriguing fragments in Usujo Gampi folios. The second variant of the standard edition (Sappho II) has larger folios of Sekishu Torinoko Gampi, folded in eight like a map.