I write and make artist’s books for the same reasons I’ve made a garden every place I’ve lived: for joy and sustenance. Many of my poems act as notes to self, messages from parts of myself that know better or more—pay attention, slow down. Plants are a great model for this: they ask of us a careful, deep attention, and they themselves move and grow in their own time. My parallel practice as a printer requires similar care. I make work also to find new ways of talking about ecological and social-justice problems that fall under what Rob Nixon calls slow violence—incremental effects that add up to significant harm to people and ecosystems. My aim is to play, in what’s at risk of becoming the ruins, in the hope of unruining them a little.
Anna Lena Phillips Bell_Ornament_Vassar Miller Poetry Prize no. 24_University of North Texas Press_2017