Matthew Richter

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Matthew Richter (born April 9, 1974 in New York City) is an author, producer, performer, and arts entrepreneur living in Seattle, Washington. He is perhaps best known as the founder of Consolidated Works, a contemporary arts center in Seattle, and for his high-profile firing from the center by its board of directors in February of 2005.

Richter has been producing alternative contemporary art, performance, film and music since his graduation from Northwestern University in 1990. In 1992, he formed the seminal Rm 608, a gallery for visual and performing arts, in an abandoned storefront on Seattle’s Capitol Hill. The “small but influential” (The Stranger) organization served as the launching point for local talents such as David Schmader, Kia Sian, and Kristen Kosmas, and over the course of its two-year lifespan presented over 200 world-premiere works of theater and performance art, several of which received continued runs off-Broadway in New York City. On its closing in 1994 (the organization’s lifespan was built into its structure, and the closing was anticipated) Richter was quoted in The Seattle Weekly as saying, “Organizations should end, in the same way that performances end, so that the audience can clap, go home, and think about what it meant.”

In 1995, he was hired as the Theater Editor of The Stranger, the alternative newsweekly in Seattle. While there, he expanded his interest in writing and published investigative journalism (according to the paper’s website, one undercover report earned him personal bodyguard protection following death threats made by the group investigated) and feature-length articles that were reprinted in alternative newsweeklies around the country. He was also published in an American Heritage college geography textbook. He left the newspaper in 1997 but continues to publish sporadically, most recently writing on the issue of nonprofit reform in America.

In 1998, he formed Consolidated Works, a contemporary arts center in Seattle, housed in a renovated 32,000 square foot warehouse in Seattle’s South Lake Union neighborhood. Art in America called ConWorks (as it was known for short) “the most dazzling” alternative arts space in the Northwest. Over the course of seven years as its executive director, he grew the organization into one of the region’s most prestigious arts presenters, working with teams of curators and producers to fill the facility’s theater, cinema, visual art gallery, music hall, lecture stage, and bar. The center flourished, reportedly thanks to Richter’s “legendary fundraising skills” and “internationally renowned programming” (Seattle Post-Intelligencer).

In 2002 he was one of twelve individuals invited under the auspices of the Rockefeller Foundation to contribute as founding members of the National Arts and Technology Network. In 2003 he received the Seattle Mayor’s Arts Award on behalf of ConWorks, and also in 2003 was one of 12 recipients nationally of the Safeco Insurance Rudy Award for leadership in the nonprofit sector. A profile of the Seattle arts scene in Art in America referred to Richter as “an arts visionary.” A profile in The Stranger referred to him as “freakishly ambitious.”

He was fired from Consolidated Works by the organization’s board of directors on February 5, 2005, a move that sparked controversy and divided many in the local arts scene. The reasons for the firing were never made public. The organization continued without Richter for nearly two years following the firing, but announced its dissolution in December of 2006, after losing its mammoth facility to rising costs nearly six months prior.

In 2005, Richter formed a new company, xom, which (according to Richter) stands for “hug and kiss, matt.” Under the auspices of the new company, Richter designs and creates original furniture, lectures on the state of the arts, consults to arts organizations, and produces independent arts events.

He continues his long-running association with the 14/48 festival, the self-described “world’s quickest theater festival,” a semiannual speed-theater marathon formerly held at Consolidated Works.

In September of 2005, Richter (in collaboration with 18 chefs from around the country) created Dinner Theater, an avant-garde performance art dinner theater presented at On the Boards in Seattle.




Links

Seattle Post-Intelligencer: A Moment With Matthew Richter http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/visualart/164370_moment12.html

Seattle Weekly: The Conjurer http://www.seattleweekly.com/2002-09-04/arts/the-conjurer.php

The Stranger: Art Goes Here http://www.thestranger.com/seattle/Content?oid=7717

Seattle Post-Intelligencer: Arts Community Rallies for Richter http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/visualart/212161_conworks16.html

Art In America: Plugged in and Caffeinated http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1248/is_8_93/ai_n15370722/pg_1

On the Boards: Dinner Theater http://www.ontheboards.org/blog/?cat=10

Seattle Weekly: Cuisine / Art http://www.seattleweekly.com/2006-09-20/arts/cuisine-art.php

14/48 Festival official site: http://1448fest.com

The Stranger: Author Archive http://www.thestranger.com/seattle/Author?oid=31919

xom official website: http://xomonline.com