Black Stone Press

Hide Profile

Peter Koch, founder and proprietor of Black Stone Press, views his role in book creation as multifaceted. The poet, publisher, and printer has described himself as “Artist/Collaborationist, Designer/Printer, and Publisher,” as well as an “Archeologist of the Book, Book Architect,... Typographer/Printer to the Ur-text Project, [and] (urban) Cowboy Surrealist.” In describing his intentions, he quotes Chairil Anwar: “I’ll dig down and root out every word until I’ve gone deep enough to find the germinal word, the germinal image.” Koch continues, “as maker I could add ’...and after I’ve found them I’ll make them.’ As philosopher I might say, ’...and after I make them I’ll contemplate what I have made.”*

Koch was born in Missoula, Montana in 1943. After receiving a bachelor’s degree in philosophy from the University of Montana, Missoula, he spent time traveling in Europe and North Africa. While in Paris, Koch came in contact with the international Surrealist movement, and discovered the works of André Breton and Max Ernst, two influences which were to strongly impact his own work. Koch returned to Montana in 1974 and set up Black Stone Press as a forum for his own work and that of fellow surrealist poets.

The founding venture of the press was the six-issue run of Montana Gothic, a poetry journal edited and published by Koch between 1974 and 1977. Contributors included American writers as well as poets from Latin America and Europe, among them Robert Bly, Charles Henri Ford, Gabriel Weisz Carrington, Michael Poage, and Opal Nations. The journal also featured the work of such Surrealist-inspired artists as Bruce Lee. The single-volume journal Deadstart grew out of an essay by Koch in Montana Gothic #2 that called for a vital approach to both life and poetry: to scrap preconceived notions and start afresh.

While publishing Montana Gothic, Koch became increasingly interested in the printing process. He bought his first handpress in 1978, and in 1979 apprenticed himself to Adrian Wilson at the Press in Tuscany Alley in San Francisco for a year of intensive training in book arts. He relocated the press to the Bay Area the same year. Michael Poage’s book of poems, Born, published in 1975, was the first of many limited edition volumes printed by Koch and his then-wife, Shelley Hoyt-Koch. Other significant books include Jane Bailey’s Pomegranate of 1976, Poage’s Handbook of Ornament of 1979, and Opal Nation’s The Marvels of Professor Pettingruel of 1978, for which Koch provided illustrations. Koch also produced a number of broadsides during this period, most notably his Square Zero series, as well as providing job printing services for local businesses and organizations.

Since the dissolution of Black Stone Press in 1984, Koch has continued to print and publish, until 1990 under the name Peter Rutledge Koch, Typographic Design, and thereafter as Peter Koch, Printer . His work, in recent years, has focussed increasingly on the book itself as physical bearer of meaning, and has become more experimental with form, as earlier it had been with content. One example of his non-traditional approach to book arts is his Diogenes of 1994, printed in an edition of 50 copies, each unique, on lead plates and housed in an eartherware jug. Other significant book projects have included his Herakleitos of 1990 and Robinson Jeffers’ Point Lobos of 1987. Koch’s work has won a number of awards, including the Pushcart Prize for the Best of Small Presses for Montana Gothic in 1976 and more recently the American Library Association Award for Excellence in 1990. He has been featured in solo shows as well as group exhibitions. In addition to his printing activities, Koch is currently on the faculty at U. C. Berkeley’s Department of Visual Studies, and since 1991, is co-director of the Tuscany Alley Project at San Francisco State University.

Peter Koch: Recent Work. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Houghton Library, Harvard University, 1995. Peter Koch, Printer: Cowboy Surrealists, Maverick Poets & Pre-Socratic Philosophers . New York; San Francisco: New York Public Library; San Francisco Public Library, 1995. Biographical information has also been derived from material in the collection.

From the guide to the Black Stone Press archive, 1974–1984, (University of Delaware Library - Special Collections)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Peter Rutledge Koch papers, 1975-2006 Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
creatorOf Ritchie, George F. Cheri manuscripts, 1982-1983. UC Berkeley Libraries
creatorOf Black Stone Press archive, 1974–1984 University of Delaware Library - Special Collections
referencedIn Koch, Peter Rutledge. Black Stone Press and Peter Koch, Printer : broadsides and ephemera, 1974-2010. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Black Stone Press 1974-1982 + Peter Koch, Printer 1982-2001 : a check list. University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
referencedIn Black Stone Press : papers and ephemera, 1974-1996 Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Koch, Peter Rutledge. Peter Koch papers, 1974-2003. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Koch, Peter. person
associatedWith Koch, Peter Rutledge person
associatedWith Koch, Peter Rutledge. person
associatedWith Ritchie, George F. person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Subject
Occupation
Activity

Corporate Body

Active 1982

Active 1983

Information

Permalink: http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6ms7mcc

Ark ID: w6ms7mcc

SNAC ID: 19572422