Birth Date: | 2 December 1909 |
Birth Place: | Glasgow, Scotland |
Death Place: | New York City, U.S. |
Nationality: | Scottish |
Education: | University of Edinburgh |
Known For: | Scottish poet, collagist and photographer Active participant in the San Francisco Renaissance |
Notable Works: | The Elfin Pedlar and Tales Told by the Pixie Pool, 1923 Charms and Dreams from the Elfin Pedlar's Pack, 1924 Shadow of the Moon, 1929 The Queen O' Crow Castle, 1958 Ballads, 1964 Counting Out Rhyme, 1972 Selected Poems and Ballads, 1974 Ghosts and Grinning Shadows (a collection of short stories), 1977 Turn Again to Me and Other Poems, 1977 Gone Sailing, 1980 Songs with Music, 1982 The Bells of Dis, 1984 (With Auste Adam) Stone Cold Gothic, 1984 "San Francisco's Burning", 1985 A Helen Adam Reader. Edited with notes and an introduction by Kristin Prevallet, 2008 |
Awards: | 1981 American Book Award |
Helen Adam (December 2, 1909 in Glasgow, Scotland – September 19, 1993 in New York City) was a Scottish poet, collagist and photographer who was part of a literary movement contemporaneous to the Beat Generation that occurred in San Francisco during the 1950s and 1960s. Though often associated with the Beat poets, she would more accurately be considered one of the predecessors of the Beat Generation.
Adam's first book of poetry, The Elfin Pedlar and Tales Told by the Pixie Pool, was published in 1923, when she was 14 years old.[1] The collection was in the Victorian genre of light verse about fairies and other pastoral subjects. Her early books were well known and reviewed;[2] the composer Sir Charles Villiers Stanford set selections from The Elfin Pedlar to orchestral music, and performed them widely.[3]
Adam attended the University of Edinburgh for two years as a non-matriculated student, after which she worked as a journalist in London.[4] In 1939 she moved to the United States and eventually moved to San Francisco. In San Francisco she worked with such influential poets as Allen Ginsberg and Robert Duncan.[5] Adam also developed her first theater piece, 'San Francisco's Burning', a play with music, as well as unique visual designs & curtain by the San Francisco artist Gary Swartzburg, who worked with her on various theater projects prior to her moving to New York. One of the oldest of the poets in the San Francisco Renaissance, she worked closely with Duncan, Jess, Madeline Gleason, and Jack Spicer, among others. She also encouraged many of the Beat poets as they began to explore performance and writing as an art form. While her continued use of the ballad form "mystified" many of the poets more associated with the movement, the "magic and knowledge she brought to San Francisco startled the young wild sages of its Renaissance with a special kind of madness."[6] Robert Duncan once referred to Adam as "the extraordinary nurse of enchantment."[7]
Helen Adam and her sister Pat collaborated on a ballad opera entitled San Francisco's Burning which was published in 1963 and reissued in 1985 with score by Al Carmines and drawings by Jess. Writer and friend Samuel R. Delany describes how the sisters took on the task of writing lyrics for different songs.[8] A collection of her poems was collected in a work titled Selected Poems and Ballads. She was one of only four women whose work was included in Donald Allen's landmark anthology, The New American Poetry 1945-1960 (1960). Adam also appeared in several films: "Flotsum", a 45-minute art film done in San Francisco by her friend, the artist Gary Swartzburg, Poetry in Motion by Ron Mann, Death and Our Corpses Speak by German experimental film maker Rosa von Praunheim.
Her papers are held at University at Buffalo, The State University of New York,[9] and Kent State University.[10]
Following the death of her sister in the 1980s, Adam disappeared from public view, dying in Brooklyn, New York, in September 1993.
An example of Helen Adam's verse with its striking use of language is "Margaretta's Rime":
Adam made a series of collages in the 1950s, influenced by San Francisco artist Jess.[11] Of the work, Kristin Prevallet said that "the true desires of women are fulfilled not by mortal men, but by highly charged encounters with unhuman beings."