posted on 2023-07-26, 12:51authored byMick Gowar, Peter Cook
Ted Hughes sought collaborators throughout his literary life: from Jim Downer in the fifties to Sylvia Plath, Peter Brook, Fay Godwin, Peter Keen, Seamus Heaney and Leonard Baskin. Despite this, the majority of critical attention focuses on Hughes in isolation, and some of the work that Hughes and his collaborators saw as a creative fusion of word and visual image has been re-published without the drawings, paintings or photographs. In this article, we argue that if one wishes to appreciate the full richness and scope of Hughes's achievement it is necessary to appreciate the ingenuity and visionary subtleties of his many collaborations with visual artists.
History
Refereed
Yes
Volume
1
Publication title
Ted Hughes Society Journal
ISSN
2051-7270
Publisher
Ted Hughes Society
File version
Published version
Language
eng
Legacy posted date
2012-04-05
Legacy creation date
2019-08-22
Legacy Faculty/School/Department
ARCHIVED Faculty of Arts, Law & Social Sciences (until September 2018)