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Number 57, Fall / Winter 2005
Traditional Anarchy:
The Complaint Department
by Jack Illingworth
A Checklist of
the Complaint Department
2003--2005
by Nicholas Kennedy
Digital Influence
in Letterpress Printing
by Anik See
Commercial Nostalgia
and the Revival
of an Ancient Craft
by Jocelyne Bedard
and Hugo L Casanova
Panning for Lead ...
Striking Gold
by Jane Tilley Merks
More Dingbats, Ornaments
and Fanciful Initials
by Tim Inkster
A Rogue's Gallery
of the Canadian Book
and Printing Arts
featuring Stan Bevington
Includes a letterpress
keepsake of a design
by Nicholas Kennedy
printed at Trip Print Press
in Toronto
Other Rogues
in the series
Will Rueter
Margaret and Fred Lock
Jan and Crispin Elsted
George A Walker
William Lyon Mackenzie
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A Rogue's Gallery
of the Canadian Book and Printing Arts
Stan Bevington

(Photo: Rick/Simon.)
`Head Coach' Stan Bevington founded the Coach House Press in an
alley off Bathurst Street in Toronto in 1965. One of the
company's early acquisitions was a nineteenth-century Challenge Gordon platen press
which has come to symbolize Stan's fascination not only with
the revolutionary changes in the printer's art in the twentieth
and twenty-first centuries but also with earlier
technologies.
The press moved, in 1968, to its current home in the alley
off Huron Street behind Rochdale College, now called
bpNichol Lane. For forty years the Coach House Press has
maintained its advocacy of the avant garde, fostering the early
careers of writers such as bpNichol (The Martyrology) and
Michael Ondaatje (The Dainty Monsters) as well as George
Bowering, Di Brandt, Nicole Brossard, Frank Davey, Daphne Marlatt
and David McFadden. Coach House had a monster hit in 2001 with
the publication of Christian Bok's Eunoia, which won the
Griffin Prize for poetry the following year.
Self-described as `a refuge for the refined, an asylum for
the aesthete, and a sanctuary for the scribe', Coach House is a
unique Canadian institution. Stan Bevington's presence there has
been the key to its success. He is a master printer and is
responsible for the innovative design and high standards typical
of works produced at Coach House Printing. Stan has been awarded
several honours for his contribution to Canadian printing and
publishing, including multiple Alcuin Society citations for
excellence in book design. In 1999 he received the William Kilbourn
Award, sponsored by the Toronto Arts Council, which
celebrates 'an individual whose work is a celebration of life
through the arts in the City of Toronto'. In 2005, Stan was awarded
the Janice E. Handford Small Press Award, in recognition of his
advancement of the cause of small and literary Canadian
publishing.
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