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Victor Otto Stomps - V.O. Stomps
Extraordinary achievements by a small publisher
or special book illustration or literary achievements
are the criteria specified in the preamble of
27 November 1990, which were designed to serve
as the basis for assessing candidates for the
prize. These criteria were also associated with
Victor Otto Stomps (1897– 1970), who was
simply referred to by his friends as VauO. He
is considered to be the father of small publishing
firms and minipresses. He himself unified the
traditions of publishing books at his own expense
and of private presses. He put his ideas concerning
literature and book design into practice mainly
through three publishing houses. Stomps purchased
his first used flatbed press in 1925 at the age
of 28 years and printed "Lyrik in kleinen
schmalen Heften" by hand with two friends
in Berlin-Friedenau. This was the origin of his
first publishing firm, to which he gave the name
of "Rabenpresse" (Raven Press). "The
beginning of my 'Raven Press' was a protest against
that which drives the publishing industry, namely
the huge editions, which excludes outsiders.
It all began with a hand press; Gebser and I
had purchased this machine and did not understand
how to use it. We were unable to produce a reasonable
print. We comforted ourselves with a bottle – and
with every schnaps that we drank, we saw more
of the outline of a ghostly raven – the
hand lever was like a wing getting ready to beat." (V.O.Stomps:
Gelechter. Frankfurt am Main. 1962) In the early
1930s, the 'Rabenpresse' was the publishing house
in Germany around which young people interested
in lyrics gathered; Stomps was a publisher who
looked after the interests of his authors in
a political climate that was becoming more and
more explosive, even while placing his own life
in jeopardy. The Second World War made the continuation
of the Rabenverlag impossible. "He never
allowed himself to be guided by considerations
which lay outside of his artistic insights." (G.B.
Fuchs/Harry Ross (Hg.): guten morgen vauo. s.
23; Frankfurt: 1962) Shortly after being released
as a prisoner of war, he began his work with
Eremiten-Presse. Once again, he acted as the
publisher "of young authors". His publishing
list was characterized by texts which other firms
did not dare to publish. In 1954, Eremiten-Presse
moved into an old, half-timbered house in Stierstadt
im Taunus, which was called "Schloss Sanssouris" by
Stomps. Here Stomps lived and worked with the
employees of his publishing firm. Even authors
were incorporated into this community of life
and work, by living in Stierstadt for a time
and by setting, printing and binding their books
themselves. As a writer, V.O. Stomps dealt with
various forms of expression. In addition to poetry,
epigrams, essays and a novel, his fables are
among his most original literary productions.
In 1965, he received the Theodor Fontane Literature
Prize of the City of Berlin. "His work is
living proof of an internal necessity. His characteristically
poetic expressions were born of real psychological
conflicts and can not be severed from his literary
qualities." (guten morgen vauo p. 59) –Both
as a publisher and as a writer, Stomps promoted
freedom, in which artistic and intellectual life
can develop. With his publishing work, he has
tried to facilitate such freedom in a small way.
Financial profitability never played a role for
Stomps with regard to his publishing work. On
the contrary: To finance his publishing projects
and his livelihood, he had to accept third-party
printing jobs. After his break with "Eremiten-Presse
in 1967, he returned to Berlin and established
the "Neue Rabenpresse" when he was
70 years old. In retrospect, he was able to look
back on more than 40 years of publishing activities
with 300 authors and books. Stomps died poor
in 1970. The books published by V.O. Stomps stand
out in many ways: Both their shape and content
are characterized by his courage and his curiosity
in attempting something new: Be it with regard
to new techniques, creativity with regard to
the typography or the promotion of young authors;
innovation and the longing for something that
had never been there before were characteristic
for Stomps as a man. In this sense, the work
for which the prizes are awarded are intended
to be associated with the accomplishments of
V.O. Stomps "in content, intention and personal
commitment". They can be important single
editions or the total output of a publisher,
a graphics artist or a writer. "
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