Matthew Stadler (born 1959) is an American author who has written six novels and received several awards. Stadler has compiled four anthologies about literature, city life and public life. His essays, which have been published in magazines and museum catalogs, focus on
architecture
Architecture is the art and technique of designing and building, as distinguished from the skills associated with construction. It is both the process and the product of sketching, conceiving, planning, designing, and constructing building ...
,
urban planning
Urban planning, also known as town planning, city planning, regional planning, or rural planning, is a technical and political process that is focused on the development and design of land use and the built environment, including air, water, ...
and
sprawl.
"Sprawl is the disappearance of an idea", Stadler wrote in the annotated reader ''Where We Live Now''. "So how can we go on speaking of the city and the country, yet not remain fixed in the downward spiral of loss?"
[Stadler, Matthew]
''Where We Live Now''
''www.suddenly.org''
2008 Stadler's essays and larger projects explore this question by looking for better language and new descriptions. While there is significant overlap, Stadler's work can usefully be broken down into three areas: novels; sprawl and urbanism; publishing and public space.
Novels
Between 1990 and 2000, Stadler published four novels that focus on children, sexuality, and art: ''
Landscape: Memory'' (1990); ''
The Dissolution of Nicholas Dee'' (1993); ''
The Sex Offender'' (1994); and''
Allan Stein
''Allan Stein'' is a 1999 novel by Matthew Stadler. Its epigraph is a quotation from writer Gertrude Stein: ''"What is the use of being a boy if you grow up to become a man, what is the use?"''
The novel won the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Men' ...
'' (1999). These books were widely discussed and lauded as gay fiction, including the 1999 Lambda Award for Best Gay Novel, for Allan Stein. After co-founding
Publication Studio in 2009, Stadler went on to use this platform to publish a so-called "cover novel," ''
Chloe Jarren’s La Cucaracha'' (2011), as well as the dystopian novel ''
Minders
The Minders are an American band closely associated with The Elephant Six Collective. Started by Martyn Leaper in Denver, Colorado in 1996, the band's original members included Leaper on guitars and vocals, Rebecca Cole, on drums, Jeff Almond ...
'' (2015).
Reviewing ''
Allan Stein
''Allan Stein'' is a 1999 novel by Matthew Stadler. Its epigraph is a quotation from writer Gertrude Stein: ''"What is the use of being a boy if you grow up to become a man, what is the use?"''
The novel won the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Men' ...
'' in the
New York Times
''The New York Times'' (''the Times'', ''NYT'', or the Gray Lady) is a daily newspaper based in New York City with a worldwide readership reported in 2020 to comprise a declining 840,000 paid print subscribers, and a growing 6 million paid d ...
,
Edmund White
Edmund Valentine White III (born 1940) is an American novelist, memoirist, playwright, biographer and an essayist on literary and social topics. Since 1999 he has been a professor at Princeton University. France made him (and later ) de l'Ordr ...
wrote, "What makes ''Allan Stein'' unusual is the lyric suppleness and restraint of the writing, a kind of mandarin American casualness that is peculiar to such West Coast writers as Dennis Cooper, Dodie Bellamy, Kevin Killian and Robert Gluck, a school of refined but deceptively offhand stylists. Matthew Stadler is its newest star. In Allan Stein we encounter the trademark passages of stark beauty...With it Stadler demonstrates that he is among the handful of first-rate young American novelists, one with a wide reach and a quirky, elegant pen."
Sprawl and urbanism
In the early 1990s, while living in
Groningen
Groningen (; gos, Grunn or ) is the capital city and main municipality of Groningen province in the Netherlands. The ''capital of the north'', Groningen is the largest place as well as the economic and cultural centre of the northern part of t ...
, the Netherlands, to research his novel, ''
The Dissolution of Nicholas Dee'', Stadler was invited to take part in an architectural conference at the Technical University at Delft. Through this conference and subsequent invitations to write about architecture for the Dutch journal ''Wiederhal'', Stadler became involved in that country's discussion of urban planning and design.
At a 1993 conference in
Rotterdam
Rotterdam ( , , , lit. ''The Dam on the River Rotte'') is the second largest city and municipality in the Netherlands. It is in the province of South Holland, part of the North Sea mouth of the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta, via the ''"N ...
, called Bliss, Stadler was asked to respond to
Rem Koolhaas
Remment Lucas Koolhaas (; born 17 November 1944) is a Dutch architect, architectural theorist, urbanist and Professor in Practice of Architecture and Urban Design at the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University. He is often cited as a re ...
's recently published "Manifesto for Bigness." In his talk, subsequently published as "I Think I'm Dumb," Stadler characterized the sprawl of the American West Coast as "the native home for bigness," and endorsed it as a productive, urban landscape. Many of the subsequent themes in Stadler's work on sprawl and urbanism can be found in this initial essay.
In "I Think I'm Dumb" Stadler writes that the borderless West Coast city "feels like material scattered around in space or like electronic information. The huge glass boxes downtown could easily be kicked over, like models pumped up with growth hormones, huge and brittle air. Walking down the hill from where I live to downtown is like walking over a scab. The interstate freeway…has twelve lanes and cuts right through the middle of the city. It goes from Canada to Mexico." But rather than condemning this landscape as a failure, Stadler asserts that "this place has given rise to a peculiar, dumb and lovely pattern of work that
s Rem K ponders in his manifesto'reconstructs the whole' and is doing something with the collective (it's hard to describe exactly what that is), plus it sheds some light on 'the real.'" (Here Stadler links sprawl to the three positive capacities that Koolhaas's manifesto ascribes to Bigness.)
Stadler's inclination to look for positive potentials in the shapeless new landscapes of sprawl matured over the next decade as he read (and published) the essays of the poet
Lisa Robertson
Lisa Robertson (born July 22, 1961) is a Canadian poet, essayist and translator. She lives in France.
Life and work
Born in Toronto, Ontario, Robertson moved to British Columbia in 1979, first living on Saltspring Island, then in Vancouver, wh ...
. Writing as the Office for Soft Architecture, Robertson pursued what she calls ''lyrical research'' into the new, dynamic forms of cities, especially her home (then) of Vancouver, B.C., Canada. Robertson's evocations of "this permanent transience, the buildings or shelters like tents—tents of steel, chipboard, stucco, glass, cement, paper, and various claddings—tents rising and falling in the glittering rhythm which is null rhythm, which is the flux of modern careers..." helped Stadler understand how writing can transform degraded landscapes into sites of meaning and beauty.
This insight was confirmed and persuasively theorized by German urban planner
Thomas Sieverts
Thomas Sieverts (born 8 June 1934) is a German architect and urban planner. He is the author of '' Zwischenstadt'' (1997; first published in English in 2000 as ''Cities without Cities: An interpretation of the Zwischenstadt''), a book which addre ...
in his book,
Zwischenstadt, which came into English in 1997 as ''Cities Without Cities''. Stadler's encounter with Sieverts's work in 2003, catalyzed the analysis of cities and sprawl that he ultimately published in the annotated reader, ''Where We Live Now''.
''Where We Live Now'' is a collection of urban theory, historical documents, and literature that makes three simple arguments: (1) Thomas Sieverts's description of what he calls "zwischenstadt" (literally the "in-between city") is a useful, accurate description of the built environment that has displaced the old concentric city; (2) this condition, of a densely inhabited in-between landscape, has a deep history in North America, predating the arrival of European explorers, which can be usefully articulated if we study indigenous history in the Americas as urban history; and (3), that new literature which springs from this history can help us occupy the in-between landscapes fully and well. These three arguments — advocacy for the relevance of Sieverts's analysis; an insistence that indigenous history is urban history; and a faith in the power of literature to shape an urban future — form the core of Stadler's work on urbanism and sprawl.
Publishing and public space
At a 2008 lecture in Vitoria, Spain, Stadler described publication as "the creation of a public ... There is no preexisting public," he went on. "The public is created through deliberate, willful acts: the circulation of texts, discussions and gatherings in physical space, and the maintenance of a related digital commons. These construct a common space of conversation, a public space, which beckons a public into being. This publication in its fullest sense."
[Stadler, Matthew]
"Matthew Stadler asks: What is Publication? Montehermoso art center, Vitoria, Spain"
Suddenly.org, 9/27/08.
Stadler maintains that the public we think of when we speak of "public opinion" or "mainstream" is the manufactured product of special interests that use the publication to conjure a public that "can justify their own self-interests." He cites the example of the "public will" conjured by the US government and news media to support that country's 2003 invasion of Iraq. Publication "is always a political act," Stadler argues. It is "imperative that we publish" not only as a means to counter the influence of a hegemonic "public," but also to reclaim the space in which we imagine ourselves and our collectivity. "We feel lonely and powerless when we accept the myth of 'the mainstream public.' When we accept that fiction we relinquish our ability to form our own collectivities and draw hope from them."
A year before Stadler's first novel was released, he began to run a writing class at his kitchen table in Seattle. He met there several writers, artists, and scientists including
Lee Hartwell
Leland Harrison (Lee) Hartwell (born October 30, 1939 in Los Angeles, California) is former president and director of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, Washington (state), Washington. He shared the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physio ...
and
Frances McCue. That same year, McCue and poet
Jan Wallace had founded a reading series,
The Rendezvous Room Reading Series, to bridge the gap between academic writers at the
University of Washington
The University of Washington (UW, simply Washington, or informally U-Dub) is a public research university in Seattle, Washington.
Founded in 1861, Washington is one of the oldest universities on the West Coast; it was established in Seattle a ...
and the underground writers of The
Red Sky Poetry Theatre
Red Sky Poetry Theatre was the longest running live weekly poetry series and open mic in Seattle history.
Sunrise
Don Wilsun, who previously co-founded Dogtown Poetry Theater with Joe Scozzy, was a driving force in the founding of Red Sky Poetr ...
. Stadler joined them as a co-director of the series. "One thing led to another, and before long we were organizing classes for writers and artists in a self-generating night school called The Extension Project," Stadler wrote in the introduction to an unpublished manuscript.
During this time Stadler began to publish his novels, which were placed with large New York-based publishers,
Charles Scribner's Sons
Charles Scribner's Sons, or simply Scribner's or Scribner, is an American publisher based in New York City, known for publishing American authors including Henry James, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Kurt Vonnegut, Marjorie Kinnan Rawli ...
,
Harper-Collins
HarperCollins Publishers LLC is one of the Big Five English-language publishing companies, alongside Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster, Hachette, and Macmillan. The company is headquartered in New York City and is a subsidiary of News Corp ...
, and
Grove Press
Grove Press is an United States of America, American Imprint (trade name), publishing imprint that was founded in 1947. Imprints include: Black Cat, Evergreen, Venus Library, and Zebra. Barney Rosset purchased the company in 1951 and turned it in ...
. He also wrote for widely distributed, New York-based journals such as the ''
New York Times
''The New York Times'' (''the Times'', ''NYT'', or the Gray Lady) is a daily newspaper based in New York City with a worldwide readership reported in 2020 to comprise a declining 840,000 paid print subscribers, and a growing 6 million paid d ...
'', the ''
New York Times Magazine
''The New York Times Magazine'' is an American Sunday magazine supplement included with the Sunday edition of ''The New York Times''. It features articles longer than those typically in the newspaper and has attracted many notable contributors. ...
'', ''
Spin Magazine
''Spin'' (stylized in all caps) is an American music magazine founded in 1985 by publisher Bob Guccione, Jr. Now owned by Next Management Partners, the magazine is an online publication since it stopped issuing a print edition in 2012.
Histor ...
'', the ''
Village Voice
''The Village Voice'' is an American news and culture paper, known for being the country's first alternative newsweekly. Founded in 1955 by Dan Wolf, Ed Fancher, John Wilcock, and Norman Mailer, the ''Voice'' began as a platform for the creat ...
'', and many others. But frustration with the narrow interests at this publication led Stadler to focus on small "start-up" journals and zines closer to home, where he was able to develop concerns and a writing style that were not in fashion with the editors he knew at the larger New York-based journals.
In 1994, he joined a fledgling weekly newspaper in Seattle, ''
The Stranger'', and became their first books editor, founding a books quarterly and bringing accomplished poets and prose writers such as
Eileen Myles
Eileen Myles (born December 9, 1949) is a LAMBDA Literary Award-winning American poet and writer who has produced more than twenty volumes of poetry, fiction, non-fiction, libretti, plays, and performance pieces over the last three decades. No ...
,
Charles D'Ambrosio
Charles Anthony D'Ambrosio, Jr (born 1958) is an American short story writer and essayist.
Life
The son of Charles D'Ambrosio, Sr (1932-2011), a professor of finance at the University of Washington, D'Ambrosio grew up with two brothers and four s ...
,
Lisa Robertson
Lisa Robertson (born July 22, 1961) is a Canadian poet, essayist and translator. She lives in France.
Life and work
Born in Toronto, Ontario, Robertson moved to British Columbia in 1979, first living on Saltspring Island, then in Vancouver, wh ...
,
Kevin Killian
Kevin Killian (December 24, 1952 – June 15, 2019) was an American poet, author, editor, and playwright primarily of LGBT literature. ''My Vocabulary Did This to Me: The Collected Poetry of Jack Spicer'', which he co-edited with Peter Gizzi, wo ...
,
Bruce Benderson
Bruce Benderson (born August 6, 1946) is an American author, born to parents of Russian Jewish descent, who lives in New York. He attended William Nottingham High School (1964) in Syracuse, New York and then Binghamton University (1969). He is t ...
, and
Stacey Levine
Stacey Levine is an American novelist, short story author, and journalist. Born in St. Louis, Missouri, she attended The University of Missouri's journalism school and the University of Washington. Her fiction and criticism have appeared in num ...
to write for the paper. In 1996 he became the first (and only) literary editor for ''
Nest Magazine'', an idiosyncratic interiors magazine, founded and directed by
Joseph Holtzman, that Stadler described as "a really beautiful zine run by a millionaire." Nest, where Stadler assigned and edited all of the texts throughout the magazine's six-year run, won the National Magazine Awards for General Excellence and for Design and was widely acclaimed as, in architect
Rem Koolhaas
Remment Lucas Koolhaas (; born 17 November 1944) is a Dutch architect, architectural theorist, urbanist and Professor in Practice of Architecture and Urban Design at the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University. He is often cited as a re ...
's words, "an anti-materialistic, idealistic magazine about the hyper-specific in a world that is undergoing radical leveling, an 'interior design' magazine hostile to the cosmetic."
Many of the writers Stadler published at ''The Stranger'' and ''Nest'' had books they could not get published, so in 2001 he co-founded
Clear Cut Press
Clear Cut Press was a small press based in Astoria, Oregon.
About
Clear Cut Press was founded by novelist Matthew Stadler and Up Records co-founder Rich Jensen in 2002. Jensen began talking to Stadler while taking a poetry class in 1997. The ...
, a small independent press, with
Rich Jensen
Rich may refer to:
Common uses
* Rich, an entity possessing wealth
* Rich, an intense flavor, color, sound, texture, or feeling
**Rich (wine), a descriptor in wine tasting
Places United States
* Rich, Mississippi, an unincorporated commun ...
, the former president of
Sub Pop Records
Sub is a common abbreviation of words beginning with the prefix "sub-". Sub or SUB may also refer to
Places
* Juanda International Airport, Surabaya, Indonesia, IATA code SUB
Computing and technology
* , an HTML tag for subscript
* SUB designat ...
and co-founder of
Up Records
Up Records was a Seattle based independent record label founded in 1994 by Chris Takino and Rich Jensen. Some of the label's best known artists were 764-Hero, Built to Spill, Modest Mouse, Quasi and Tad.
Chris Takino died of leukemia in 2000 ...
.
Clear Cut Press
Clear Cut Press was a small press based in Astoria, Oregon.
About
Clear Cut Press was founded by novelist Matthew Stadler and Up Records co-founder Rich Jensen in 2002. Jensen began talking to Stadler while taking a poetry class in 1997. The ...
applied the viral, community-based marketing that Jensen had used to cultivate audiences for music at Sub Pop and Up to promote new books by the authors Stadler had been publishing at ''Nest'' and ''The Stranger''. The press hosted festive public gatherings that blended readings with live music by friends of the press, including
Phil Elverum
Philip Whitman Elverum (; born May 23, 1978) is an American musician, songwriter, record producer and visual artist, best known for his musical projects The Microphones and Mount Eerie. Based in Anacortes, Washington, in the mid-2000s he began ...
,
Jona Bechtolt
Jona Bechtolt (born December 2, 1980) is an electronic musician and multimedia artist based in Portland, Oregon, Portland, Oregon, United States, best known for his band Yacht (band), YΔCHT. He is a former member of The Badger King, Dirty Project ...
(YACHT),
Black Cat Orchestra,
Lou Barlow
Louis Knox Barlow (born July 17, 1966) is an American alternative rock musician and songwriter. A founding member of the groups Dinosaur Jr., Sebadoh and The Folk Implosion, Barlow is credited with helping to pioneer the lo-fi style of rock mus ...
, and many others. The events were meant to "cultivate a long-term conversation that makes a community of readers," Stadler said in a 2004 interview.
[Womack, Andrew]
''Clear Cut Press''
The Morning News, July 2004
The books, printed in a uniform trim size and designed by
Tae Won Yu, were distributed primarily by subscription. "
eship a book out of the warehouse if we feel confident that it will reach a reader," Stadler continued. "That means (1) shipping to those who have already paid (subscribers and online orders); (2) shipping to stores that know CCP well and will shepherd the books to readers; (3) shipping to distributors who know CCP well…" Clear Cut Press published nine books in runs of 2000 – 4000 and sold out most of its runs with a less-than-one percent return rate, virtually unheard of in commercial publishing (industry average is 45% return rate).
In April 2005, Stadler and Clear Cut author
Matt Briggs
Matt Briggs (born 1970) is an American novelist and short story writer.
Biography
Matt Briggs was born in Seattle, Washington, which he still calls home. He grew up in the Snoqualmie Valley raised by working-class, counter-culture parents who cu ...
organized the
Unassociated Writers Conference and Dance Party as "part party, part architectural experiment, part performance, part song and dance," the conference promoted an alternative literary culture of zines, micro presses and project-based publishing."
In 2004 Clear Cut Press sponsored a dinner for its subscribers in Portland, Oregon, collaborating with a restaurant group called ''Ripe''. The evening included live music, readings, a film, and food and drink. Stadler later asked Ripe's owners, Michael Hebb and Naomi Pomeroy, to appoint him as a "writer in residence" for Ripe. In exchange for food and drink he would write essays and program a monthly series of "presentations/symposia/bacchanals replete with food, drink, music, and general boisterousness garlanding the central pleasure of bright intellects voicing their excellent texts, winging it in conversation, and screening or presenting various textual and visual delights." The result was
the back room, an ongoing series of dinners and conversations with associated commissions for new publications. As of 2008, the back room has held over 30 events (with such guests as
Gore Vidal
Eugene Luther Gore Vidal (; born Eugene Louis Vidal, October 3, 1925 – July 31, 2012) was an American writer and public intellectual known for his epigrammatic wit, erudition, and patrician manner. Vidal was bisexual, and in his novels and ...
,
Aaron Peck,
Gregory Crewdson
Gregory Crewdson (born September 26, 1962) is an American photographer. He photographs tableaux of American homes and neighborhoods.
Life and career
Crewdson was born in the Park Slope neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York. He attended John Dewey ...
,
Anne Focke,
Mary Gaitskill
Mary Gaitskill (born November 11, 1954) is an American novelist, essayist, and short story writer. Her work has appeared in ''The New Yorker'', ''Harper's Magazine'', ''Esquire'', ''The Best American Short Stories'' (1993, 2006, 2012, 2020), and ...
,
Lisa Robertson
Lisa Robertson (born July 22, 1961) is a Canadian poet, essayist and translator. She lives in France.
Life and work
Born in Toronto, Ontario, Robertson moved to British Columbia in 1979, first living on Saltspring Island, then in Vancouver, wh ...
,
Lawrence Rinder
Lawrence R. Rinder is a contemporary art curator and museum director. He directed the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA) from 2008 to 2020.
Education
Rinder received a B.A. in art from Reed College and an M.A. in art history fro ...
, and
Aaron Betsky
Aaron Betsky, born 1958 in Missoula, Montana, is an American critic on art, architecture and design. He was the director of Virginia Tech's School of Architecture + Design until early 2022.
Trained as an architect and in the humanities at Yale ...
) and commissioned more than a dozen new essays, publishing eight chapbooks and one 500-page anthology, which are distributed worldwide.
Broad interest in the Clear Cut Press model and the back room events led Stadler, in 2005, to found the Using Global Media workshop, a seminar of sorts that functions as a laboratory for exploring what he calls "the ecology of publication" (that is, the combination of printed texts with public gatherings and an associated digital commons). The workshop convenes as a group of a dozen or so, periodically; and it grows by convening in distant places where new members can join, whenever circumstances allow.
The publication project called ''suddenly'' developed from conversations with the curator,
Stephanie Snyder, who directed the back room and joined the Using Global Media workshop in 2006. The ''suddenly'' web site is authored by another workshop member, Sergio Pastor. Stadler chose to publish ''suddenlys central document, a 500-page annotated reader, ''Where We Live Now'', with the
print-on-demand
Print on demand (POD) is a printing technology and business process in which book copies (or other documents, packaging or materials) are not printed until the company receives an order, allowing prints of single or small quantities. While oth ...
site, Lulu. ''Suddenly'' distributes the book by programming public conversations in many cities around the world, so that rather than having a large reservoir of printed copies that must be stored until they are pushed out through market pipelines, suddenly cultivates conversations that then draw the books out one-by-one from the printer, like sponges drawing water.
In September 2009 he co-founded
Publication Studio,
a
print-on-demand
Print on demand (POD) is a printing technology and business process in which book copies (or other documents, packaging or materials) are not printed until the company receives an order, allowing prints of single or small quantities. While oth ...
publisher that prints and binds books by hand in a Portland, Ore., storefront, "creating original work with artists and writers we admire, books that both respond to the conversation of the moment and can endure. We attend to the social life of the book, cultivating a public that cares and is engaged. Publication Studio is a laboratory for publication in its fullest sense — not just the production of books, but the production of a public."
Among the writers and artists published by Publication Studio are
Lawrence Rinder
Lawrence R. Rinder is a contemporary art curator and museum director. He directed the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA) from 2008 to 2020.
Education
Rinder received a B.A. in art from Reed College and an M.A. in art history fro ...
,
Walter Benjamin
Walter Bendix Schönflies Benjamin (; ; 15 July 1892 – 26 September 1940) was a German Jewish philosopher, cultural critic and essayist.
An eclectic thinker, combining elements of German idealism, Romanticism, Western Marxism, and Jewish mys ...
,
Ari Marcopoulos
Ari Marcopoulos (born Aristos) is an American self-taught photographer, adventurer and film artist. Born in the Netherlands, he is best known for presenting work showcasing elusive subcultures, including artists, snowboarders and musicians. He liv ...
,
Lisa Robertson
Lisa Robertson (born July 22, 1961) is a Canadian poet, essayist and translator. She lives in France.
Life and work
Born in Toronto, Ontario, Robertson moved to British Columbia in 1979, first living on Saltspring Island, then in Vancouver, wh ...
,
Thomas Sieverts
Thomas Sieverts (born 8 June 1934) is a German architect and urban planner. He is the author of '' Zwischenstadt'' (1997; first published in English in 2000 as ''Cities without Cities: An interpretation of the Zwischenstadt''), a book which addre ...
,
Jessica Jackson Hutchins, and
Matt Briggs
Matt Briggs (born 1970) is an American novelist and short story writer.
Biography
Matt Briggs was born in Seattle, Washington, which he still calls home. He grew up in the Snoqualmie Valley raised by working-class, counter-culture parents who cu ...
.
Publication Studio
Publication Studio is a publisher founded in
Portland
Portland most commonly refers to:
* Portland, Oregon, the largest city in the state of Oregon, in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States
* Portland, Maine, the largest city in the state of Maine, in the New England region of the northeas ...
, Oregon in 2009 by Matthew Stadler and Patricia No, that "marries the common view of DIY practice with global reach"
by using cheap, widely available
print on demand
Print on demand (POD) is a printing technology and business process in which book copies (or other documents, packaging or materials) are not printed until the company receives an order, allowing prints of single or small quantities. While oth ...
technologies. Books are published as ordered via the company's website or in person or they can be bought in bookstores across North America, Europe, and Japan.
Located in a dedicated storefront in downtown Portland Publication Studio now has twelve "sibling studios" producing original books in Berkeley, CA, Guelph, ON, Canada, Vancouver, BC, Canada, Toronto, ON, Canada, Minneapolis, MN, Los Angeles, CA, Philadelphia, PA, Portland, ME, Hudson, NY, Malmö, SE, London, UK, and Rotterdam, NL.
Publication Studio has published over 300 books (April 2016) by authors including
Aaron Peck,
Thomas Sieverts
Thomas Sieverts (born 8 June 1934) is a German architect and urban planner. He is the author of '' Zwischenstadt'' (1997; first published in English in 2000 as ''Cities without Cities: An interpretation of the Zwischenstadt''), a book which addre ...
, Matthew Stadler,
Lawrence Rinder
Lawrence R. Rinder is a contemporary art curator and museum director. He directed the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA) from 2008 to 2020.
Education
Rinder received a B.A. in art from Reed College and an M.A. in art history fro ...
,
Travis Jeppesen
Travis Jeppesen is an American novelist, poet, artist, and art critic. He is known, among other works, for his novel ''The Suiciders''; a non-fiction novel about North Korea, ''See You Again in Pyongyang''; and for his object-oriented writing work, ...
,
Paul G. Maziar and
Walter Benjamin
Walter Bendix Schönflies Benjamin (; ; 15 July 1892 – 26 September 1940) was a German Jewish philosopher, cultural critic and essayist.
An eclectic thinker, combining elements of German idealism, Romanticism, Western Marxism, and Jewish mys ...
.
Works
''Google Books'' Landscape: Memory (Scribner's, 1990)
''Google Books'' The Dissolution of Nicholas Dee (HarperCollins Publishers, 1993)
''Google Books'' The Sex Offender: A Novel (HarperCollins Publishers, 1995)
''Google Books''Allan Stein
''Allan Stein'' is a 1999 novel by Matthew Stadler. Its epigraph is a quotation from writer Gertrude Stein: ''"What is the use of being a boy if you grow up to become a man, what is the use?"''
The novel won the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Men' ...
(Grove Press, 2000)
*
Chloe Jarren's La Cucaracha (Publication Studio, Jank Editions, 2011)
''Google Books''Deventer (Nai, 2013)
*
Minders: A Novel (Publication Studio, 2015)
Anthologies including Stadler's Work
''Men on Men 4: Best New Gay Fiction, ed. George Stambolian, Felice Picano, Andrew Holleran''(Plume, 1992)
''Boys Like Us: Gay Writers Tell Their Coming Out Stories, ed. Patrick Merla''(Avon Books, 1996)
''Northwest Edge: Deviant Fictions'' ed.
Lidia Yuknavitch
Lidia Yuknavitch ( ; born June 18, 1963) is an American writer, teacher and editor based in Oregon. She is the author of the memoir ''The Chronology of Water'', and the novels ''The Small Backs of Children,'' '' Dora: A Headcase,'' and ''The Boo ...
, L. N. Pearson (Two Girls, 2000)
''Gay Fiction Speaks, ed. Richard Canning''(Columbia University Press, 2000)
''The Rendezvous Reader: Northwest Writing ed. Novella Carpenter, Paula Gilovich, Rachel Kessler''(Tenth Avenue East Publishing, 2002)
''Considering Rem Koolhaas and the Office for Metropolitan Architecture ed. Rem Koolhaas, Véronique Patteeuw, Office for Metropolitan Architecture, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin (Germany), Nederlands Architectuurinstituut, Neue Nationalgalerie (Germany), Kunsthal Rotterdam''(NAi Publishers, 2003)
''Reading Seattle: The City in Prose, ed. Peter Donahue, John Trombold ''(University of Washington Press, 2004)
''Hear Us Out: Conversations with Gay Novelists ed. Richard Canning''(Columbia University Press, 2004)
''Reading Portland: The City in Prose ed. John Trombold, Peter Donahue ''(University of Washington Press, 2007)
Anthologies Edited by Stadler
''The Clear Cut Future''(
Clear Cut Press
Clear Cut Press was a small press based in Astoria, Oregon.
About
Clear Cut Press was founded by novelist Matthew Stadler and Up Records co-founder Rich Jensen in 2002. Jensen began talking to Stadler while taking a poetry class in 1997. The ...
, 2003)
''The Back Room''(
Clear Cut Press
Clear Cut Press was a small press based in Astoria, Oregon.
About
Clear Cut Press was founded by novelist Matthew Stadler and Up Records co-founder Rich Jensen in 2002. Jensen began talking to Stadler while taking a poetry class in 1997. The ...
, 2007)
''Where We Live Now: an annotated reader''(Suddenly.org, 2008)
Honors and awards
Stadler has been awarded numerous prizes for his work, including a
Guggenheim Fellowship
Guggenheim Fellowships are grants that have been awarded annually since by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation to those "who have demonstrated exceptional capacity for productive scholarship or exceptional creative ability in the ar ...
, a
Whiting Award
The Whiting Award is an American award presented annually to ten emerging writers in fiction, nonfiction, poetry and plays. The award is sponsored by the Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation
Mrs. (American English) or Mrs (British English; standard E ...
, The Hinda Rosenthal Prize of the
American Academy of Arts and Letters
The American Academy of Arts and Letters is a 300-member honor society whose goal is to "foster, assist, and sustain excellence" in American literature, music, and art. Its fixed number membership is elected for lifetime appointments. Its headqu ...
, a Howard Foundation Fellowship from
Brown University
Brown University is a private research university in Providence, Rhode Island. Brown is the seventh-oldest institution of higher education in the United States, founded in 1764 as the College in the English Colony of Rhode Island and Providenc ...
, and a
United States Artists
United States Artists (USA) is a national arts funding organization based in Chicago. USA is dedicated to supporting living artists and cultural practitioners across the United States by granting unrestricted awards.
Mission
The organization' ...
Fellowship in 2006, the inaugural round of that program.
References
External links
"Just Here to Help: Global Art Production and Local Meanings" in ''Fillip'' Issue 8"Matthew Stadler", ''Penn Sound''"Matthew Stadler's Personal Weblog", "Urban Honking"Profile at The Whiting Foundation"Publication Studio"KCRW Bookworm Interview*
Matthew Stadler Papers. General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Stadler, Matthew
1959 births
20th-century American novelists
21st-century American novelists
American male novelists
American gay writers
Lambda Literary Award for Gay Fiction winners
Living people
Deep Springs College faculty
American LGBT poets
American LGBT novelists
20th-century American poets
21st-century American poets
American male poets
20th-century American male writers
21st-century American male writers
Columbia University School of the Arts alumni
Gay poets