Showing posts with label The Beat Generation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Beat Generation. Show all posts

Monday, February 11, 2019

Tosh Berman and Jason Schwartzman discussing "Tosh: Growing Up in Wallace Berman's World" at Skylight Books

Photo by Janet Grey

It was a treat for me to do an event and signing at Skylight Books in Los Feliz (Los Angeles). The crowd was amazing and I enjoyed the conversation with Jason Schwartzman about my book "Tosh." Jason is a very good friend, and it was comforting for me to be in front of the audience with his presence.  I want to thank Skylight Books for hosting, and just being a fantastic bookstore.  So thank you!

Here's the discussion:  


Thursday, October 4, 2018

Wallace Berman Curator Sophie Dannenmuller on Tosh Talks





Wallace Berman Curator Sophie Dannenmuller on Tosh Talks

Sophie Dannenmuller is an expert on my father the artist Wallace Berman as well as curating three Berman exhibitions at the Galerie Frank Elbaz in Paris. The current show that is up now (until October 11, 2018) is called "Visual Music." It focuses on the connection between Wallace's visual sensibility and his love of music, that is very much part of his art. Sophie and I talk in great detail about Berman's art, as well as the culture surrounding Wallace, such as the Beat Generation, and figures like Jack Kerouac, Allen 
Ginsberg, William Burroughs and so forth. I'm very happy how this conversation turned out, and I think one who has an interest in the Beat Artists and beyond, will find this fascinating. Your host Tosh Berman, Tosh Talks.

The painting behind us is by the artist Jean-Francois Le Merrer.

Thursday, August 9, 2018

"The Beat Scene" Photographs by Burt Glinn, Essay by Jack Kerouac (Reel Art Press)

ISBN: 978-1-909526-26-6
A remarkable time machine of going back to the late 1950s to observe 'The Beat Scene' as it happened.  Burt Glinn was a classic photojournalist of the classic Life/Look/Esquire years.  Reel Art Press (RAP) not long ago put out a book of images by Glinn of the first day Castro obtained power in Cuba.   The images were raw but beautifully framed by Glinn's eye and his skill as a cameraman.  There are many images of the Beats in  New York and San Francisco, but the big difference from someone like Charles Brittin and Glinn is that Brittin was an intimate friend of his subject matters.  I feel Glinn was there as an assignment, and then moved on to another exciting location after the job was done.  Therefore these images of this generation were put in storage for over 50 years.  

Which actually gives an interesting texture or layer in his observations of the Beats.  He wrote the captions as well as these photographs, and it is geared toward the reader or viewer who knows nothing of this world but heard about it through the mainstream media.  And Glinn represented the mainstream world looking into the bohemian world.  Most images I have seen of The Beats either came from my father (Wallace Berman), Charles Brittin or Fred W. McDarrah in New York City.  The poet Allen Ginsberg is another great photographer who documented his social/work world as well.  But Glinn's work has a journalistic distance from his subject matter, and one can easily imagine these images being in LIFE Magazine in the late 1950s. 

The Beats generally don't have a high trust in the mainstream media world for many good reasons.  Exploitation is the most obvious reason, but Glinn also captures the inner glamor of such young people doing fun things.  Who doesn't want to go to a painter's party, or to a bar to hear poetry/jazz, and drink red wine?  Glinn's work is there to document a moment for the mainstream masses, which doesn't mean the photographs are not accurate, but still, there is a Hollywood cinematic touch to the color which makes the images very contemporary.   Glinn was a fantastic photographer, but in a very classical sense of picture and subject together.   There is no doubt that everyone in the Beat movement was extraordinarily handsome or beautiful. Even it's children, such as page 142, is at the very least, cute. 

Jack Kerouac's intro text is fantastic regarding an average night out in Beat-dom.  For those who even have the slightest interest in the counter-culture or the Beats should look at this book page-by-page.  An important document. 

Friday, February 23, 2018

Rod McKuen on Tosh Talks





Rod McKuen on Tosh Talks



The first show where I focus on an artist that I really don't care about, or do I?  Rod McKuen on the surface is the sort of figure that I never cared for, yet, as I dig deep into some aspects of his work, I'm interested in the connections he has between himself and Jacques Brel, David Bowie, the Beat Generation, Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsburg, Gregory Corso, and the whole fake "Beatnik"world, with respect to an early album by McKuen, "Beatsville."  The number one selling poet in the 1960s and 1970s, who wrote terrible poetry, is still, as one scratches on the surface, I find something of greatly interesting about his life.  Which shows, that all artists have some sort of spark that one may miss or not be aware of.  "Tosh Talks" Tosh Berman.

Sunday, January 7, 2018

Bruce Conner Artist on Tea With Tosh





Along with my father Wallace Berman, Bruce Conner is one of the great artists to come out of 20th mid-Century America.  I have known Bruce throughout my life, and one day, out of the blue, he called me to ask if he can be on "Tea With Tosh."   I remember being nervous interviewing him, due to his nature, but also my appreciation for him as an artist and filmmaker.  Shot in 1987, this is a snapshot of Bruce and his world.   - Tosh Berman, the host of "Tea With Tosh"

Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Jimmy Witherspoon /Wallace Berman - "Lush Head Woman"





My father Wallace Berman was a close friend to the great jazz and R n' B singer Jimmy Witherspoon.  They wrote a song together, and 'the Spoon" recorded it.  Here it is.  "Lush Head Woman"

Sunday, May 18, 2014

May 18, 2014



May 18, 2014

It is strange to see one’s world being represented in a book, TV show, or film, and realizing that you are essentially part of it, but the fact is, you’re not.  The first time I have ever seen or heard of a beatnik was Maynard G. Krebs on the “The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis” TV show.  The irony is that many consider me the child of the Beats, due to my parents of course, but mostly how the media portrayed them in various books regarding my father, as well as publications like Look magazine and so forth.   Even today, my life is well-documented by others, who I have to presume knows more about me than I know myself.  The biggest archive of images of yours truly is at the Getty Institute, yet I don’t own any of the images of myself, nor have I seen them.



One soon realizes that a reality or a truth is not the main end-product of journalism or a narrative.   I think there is a need to have a narrative where this is a beginning, a middle, and of course an end. People have trouble dealing with a narration that is messy or not complete.  But the truth is to be human is to be inconsistent with one’s history or time.  We often look back to see where we are now, but how can one trust a narrative that is not clearly stated by the subjects themselves, but by others who claim to have the story, because they read it at so-so’s publication or heard rumors.  With respect to my life, what I know is what I don’t know.   There are deep mysteries in my life, and I don’t think one can clearly dig it out from the rest of one’s history.




The funny thing is when I do run upon a picture of myself or others at that time, is how timeless they or everyone looks.  When you see Maynard, he looks very dated.  Or if you see any film made in the late 50s regarding the alternative social scene or the beats, it looks like someone’s remorseful sense of memory. Mainstream cinema has never portrayed an alternative world properly. I think due that the filmmakers have very little knowledge of that world.  Or perhaps it has something to do with the camera, that truth looks into the viewfinder, and fiction comes out at the other end.

  It must have been very strange for Jack Kerouac to walk into a room, and everyone knows who he is and what he is.   The truth is one doesn’t know who he is, they just presume that they know, when in fact their knowledge is at its best, second-hand gossip.  Although not famous in the sense of Kerouac (of course), I feel the “eyes” look at me as I enter a room full of strangers.  They know who I am, but I haven’t the foggiest idea who they are.  They already have an opinion on me, and yet, I am totally clueless who these people are.



I have consistently preferred the world of shadows than bright sunshine.  The freedom of walking among the shadow images of tall buildings and various trees that stand monumental in certain parts of downtown Los Angeles is my natural playground.   Seeing myself in a book, of someone else’s making strikes me as a false image, because it is a photograph that was made in a second, and so far my life has almost reached 60 years.  Yet one is judged by an image that took seconds to take, and I must somehow live that ‘dream’ for others.  The truth is I refuse to.  The spectacle wants its narrative, and I refuse to partake in someone else’s sense of what is a narrative.   The only narrative I am interested in, is the one that I write or produce.  Be aware of false footnotes in history, our memory is only as good as what we want to believe.


Friday, March 28, 2014

March 28, 2014



March 28, 2014

My not-so-distant relative the film producer Pandro S. Berman wanted to make a quick exploration film for MGM regarding the upcoming “Beat” scene that was happening at that time.  He just finished the production work for the Elvis Presley starring “Jailhouse Rock” and was interested in doing a film where Elvis played a ‘beatnik poet. ' For research, Elvis actually went to City Lights bookstore to pick up on the vibe of the store as well as the local North Beach scene.  He made an effort to get a job at City Lights as a book clerk, but that obviously wasn’t going to work out.  There was also talk of Berman producing a film version of Jack Kerouac’s novel “On The Road, ” with Elvis playing “Dean Moriarty” and British actor Dirk Bogarde playing Salvatore “Sal” Paradise, the novel’s narrator.



Bogarde flew out of London to meet Elvis in San Francisco.  At the time Elvis never drank, but still, he met Dirk at the bar Vesuvio, that was practically next door to City Lights.  Dirk just wanted to talk to Elvis personally without any managers around or studio people.  He had very little knowledge of the beats, and basically his understanding of that scene, for him, came from his knowledge regarding the Teddy Boys.  He knew and heard of the existentialist scene in Paris that was occurring at the time, but the beats were a totally foreign concept to him.   But he desperately wanted to make changes to his image from teen idol to a serious actor.  There was a darker side to Bogarde, and he felt he needed to express that side more.  But wasn’t sure how, and on top of that he was getting frustrated with the studios back in the U.K. He felt that this could be the role for him to change everything.  Also he had a great admiration for Elvis.  He didn’t really understand the music, or that type of culture, but he saw something that was sincere and raw in Elvis’ approach to music and image.



Elvis was a truck driver before singer, and he could identify with Dean with respect to his natural energy to go out and get going.  Also in his mind, the name “Dean’ relates to his favorite actor James Dean.  He was aware that his films were kind of lightweight, compared to the world of James Dean, and he wanted an ‘in’ as much as Dirk did.   Bogarde ordered himself a Pabst Blue Ribbon beer, thinking it was very American type of thing to order in a San Francisco bar, and Elvis, being Elvis, ordered a bottle of Coke.   They went together to City Lights and they each bought a copy of “On The Road, ” and looked and commented on each page of that novel over their beer and coke.

Sitting in the bar, in one of its small tables, Dirk was all of sudden taken back by him being there with the actual iconic Elvis, discussing what they both felt was an iconic novel that surely can be a film vehicle for the both of them.  With the help of Berman, they couldn’t possibly imagine this to be a failure.   Nevertheless, history has a way of by-passing moments like these for something that eventually will not be important.  And who knew at this point and time, that Dirk Bogarde would enter a second chance in the Briitsh film world as one of its most amazing actors.

Saturday, January 11, 2014

"The Stray Bullet: William S. Burroughs In Mexico" by Jorge Garcia-Robles

University of Minnesota Press ISBN: 9780816680634

It's odd but I never read a bad book on William S. Burroughs. As a writer I think he's great, as a human being, I don't know. He's a fascinating personality that's for sure, but it seems to me that he's a natural nightmare for the National Rifle Association. I can sort of understand someone who is involved with gun culture, but I can't put my head around someone who loves guns even after shooting his wife by mistake. That, would make me give up firearms, but alas, Burroughs kept his interest in firearms for the rest of his life. That part of him I don't like. 

"The Stray Bullet" is a fascinating book written by a Mexican journalist Jorge Garcia-Robles that covers Burroughs stay in Mexico. In detail it goes into the shooting of Burroughs' wife Joan and what happened before and after that tragedy. Her death has always been kept at as a distance with respect to Burroughs writings and commentary. Although he said that was the moment that he became a writer, but it struck me that he never came to accept her death by his own foolish behavior. In that sense not a very nice man. Seeing the two photographs of Joan's body in this book is shocking. Because this is the first time I have been confronted with her death in a graphic manner, and it does leaves one with a bad taste for the Burroughs image. 

It is also interesting that he had no interest whatsoever in Mexico as a culture, either in its history or popular arts. Him and Joan basically just fed their addictions... and that's basically it. In many ways Burroughs world is a very solitude and protected landscape. He risked danger but always by choice. On the surface he's a total noir type of personality, but his weakness is all over the place. "The Stray Bullet" is a sad book, but its interesting that it is written in the point-of-view of a Mexican who appreciates the art of Burroughs, but also quite frank about a man with a lot of faults.



Monday, March 5, 2012

"Wallace & I" by Tosh Berman


Wallace & I
(Originally published in Blastitude)

I wrote this little memoir about ten years ago, requested by Cary Loren for the great online blog/journal "Blastitude."  At the time I was under a strict deadline, and I had something like a week to do this piece.  For the past five or six years, I have been adding more stuff to it.  This is not it!  So one may look at this as a work in progress.  So in that nature enjoy the piece.

By Wallace Berman (copyrighted by the Estate of Wallace Berman)


My first introduction to the world of the arts is when a grown-up (always a suspicious lot to a young tot) asks me if I was going to be an artist just like my father.  My dad usually got irritated when he overheard what was basically a simple question – which seems to happen on a regular basis at the time.  But the question is anything but simple or basic: when you come right down to it, it’s inquiry in how does one follow the steps of such a genius like my father, Wallace Berman?   The simple answer to a basically ‘almost rude’ question is ‘I never think about it.’   And to this day I haven’t thought of it.   And I am sure my father never thought of it either.  Although I gather, others have thought of it.

Although one usually hears the ugliness and the failure of living with the artist, in this case, the artist  - my father - was a rather pleasant man who happened to be an artist with a lot of admirers, as well as a darn good dad.  I was blessed to be raised by a Father and Mother who stayed together and loved their only son.  So in a sense, I was raised in a world where the family unit was falling apart, but my folks stayed together in a very strong traditional family mode.  Others were not so lucky, yet the general press at the time made it sound like my Father was the kingpin of a drug art ring.   Which come to mind sounds great.  But the actual story is much more mundane with a side touch of glamor with people falling down drunk and being able to have a front seat to the great currents of modern art and pop culture during the late 50’s and 60’s.

My early memories are a household of people.  Some of them have faces and names to me, but mostly they are a secession of anonymous faces that took up space in our very tiny house in Beverly Glenn.   It seems like that there was a 24-hour party that ran from Sunday to Saturday.   In those twilight years, my first real memory was being in my bedroom – which in itself was a luxury because my parents slept in the very comfortable living room – of seeing a bloody face outside the window staring at me while I was laying awake in the crib.   It was a horrifying sight, and what made it even creepier is that the face would appear from the bottom of the window to the middle of the windowpane in what seemed to be moving in a skulking slow motion matter.   It was years later that I found out that the bloody face belonged to a folk singer named Ramblin’ Jack Elliot.  Apparently, he fell down drunk outside my window and helped himself up by that windowpane.  But to me, it seemed like a beast from hell was approaching my window.   I must have been somewhere between 6 months to a year old when I saw this image that still to this day gives me shivers.

The small house itself had its share of spirit visitors as well as living and breathing ones.   My mother told me that she had a loom in the living room – and one night it started to make its own fabric pattern.  The next morning my parents moved the Loom to the storage down the hill.  Also, I remember guests commenting that they saw an old person sitting in a rocking chair in our outside yard.   I was never aware of this old person or the rocking chair.

In addition, there was the story about a friend of my parents bringing this additional guest along (everyone then brought an additional guest to our house) who he just met for the first time at a nearby bus stop.  This particular guest had an odd speech pattern where he mostly spoke in Old English.  It was like he was dropped on this planet but had the wrong time and year and was expecting the 5th Century instead of 1950’s Beverly Glenn.  Maybe he got the 5’s mixed-up?  As the evening went on it became the main suspicion that he was actually an alien visiting us – but somehow got the wrong time or really didn’t know the habits and communication skills of us Earthlings via 1950’s.

Anyway, my parents found him perfectly charming – as this particular guest was amazed at the function of a corkscrew (imagine an instrument that opens up a bottle of wine!) and other earthly objects. Later in the early morning, my parent’s friend dropped him off at a street corner – but felt guilty right away about leaving him at dawn on a deserted bus stop.  When he went back the mysterious visitor disappeared.   He looked all over the neighborhood – but obviously, he transported himself to his spaceship to give a full report on the advance technology of the corkscrew and the inside living habits of the Bohemia set.   After 40 some years there is probably a monument to the corkscrew on some hilltop on Mars.  Hopefully, in my lifetime I will be able to visit this monument. 

I think the first time I realized that my Dad was an artist is when I went to his workplace on the left side of the living room in Beverly Glenn.  The house was perfectly organized.   The floor plan was a kitchen (the entrance), the living room, my bedroom and then a small bathroom.  The right side of the living room was the bed. The bed was used for bringing me on to this planet as well as a mixture of a couch, and perfect reading space for devouring comic books.  The left side of the living room was the studio that consisted of the work desk and stool.   This is where my Father made his art.  There were tools like hammers but what I mostly remember is the ‘Yes’ glue.  This is the paste that my father used for his verfax collages.   It stays in my mind because of the label.  It looked like one of my beloved comic book illustrations that I consumed with great intensity at that time.

It was at this location that Andy Warhol shot his first full-length film ‘Tarzan and Jane…Regained.’  I have full memory of Taylor Mead and my father’s fight scene in the film.  I also remember the woman who played ‘Jane.’  I remember playing Tarzan’s son ‘Boy.’   What I don’t remember is Andy Warhol.  I know he was there, but he left no memory for me whatsoever.  I recently saw the film and it struck me as a masterpiece.   Sadly my wife refused to sit through it and she left before I came on.  I then gave the tape to my Mother, thinking that she may possibly be overwhelmed with emotion seeing my father on the TV screen – but her only comment after seeing the film was ‘god what a boring film.’  Being the only child is sometimes a lonely adventure.

The situation then was that my Mother went out to work and my Father stayed home and took care of me.  It was during this time that I noticed he was doing ‘art’ activity.  Since the financial end was coming from my Mother’s work, I recognized that my Father too was ‘working.’  The thing is that his ‘work’ was not actually making currency (at the time).    One of the side effects of being raised in this household was the notion of work.  To this day I work every day, yet some of the work doesn’t equal or have anything to do with producing currency to contribute to the world and so forth.  I never heard my parents talk about money matters of any sort.  It wasn’t till I got married that I had my first proper ‘money matters’ talk with my wife.  And I might add I was in my early 30’s at that point.

During this period of time (mid-fifties) my father had his first and last official gallery show at the now world famous Ferus Gallery.   At the time Walter Hopps and artist Ed Keinholtz organized the gallery.   What happened was someone called the L.A.P.D. and told him or her that there was a dirty picture being displayed.  Although not proven, it has been suspected that Keinholtz called the authorities himself, probably for the purpose to get some publicity for the gallery.  There was a day-long trial and my Father was found guilty of pornography and had to serve jail time.  Luckily his good friend Dean Stockwell bailed him out of jail.  It seems that Ed and Walter were happy enough that they got some sort of publicity and if my father rotted in a jail cell…what the hell!   What’s worst is that the artwork in the exhibition was mysteriously destroyed. 

After the disappointment of the Ferus show, the family moved up to San Francisco. My next memory is being on Scott Street in San Francisco.  It was lovely.  We lived in this giant mansion with a park across the street.  But like the house, we lived in at Beverly Glenn this house too was full of people.  Mostly artists living upstairs – which I have no memory of ever being up there.   What I do remember is playing with the children on the block.  I was impressed that one of my pals on the block had a Christmas tree up all year round.  I thought that was fantastic, and of course a form of paradise for a child.  It symbolizes that Christmas never ends!  

Before San Francisco, my father started up Semina.  This small publication would be called a zine these days.  It was basically a collection of loose pages that consists of poetry, photographs and artwork.    The edition would be a print run of 100, and all of it was done on a hand press at home.  I think this was a way for my father to communicate with the world.  Or in simple terms, to share something that he liked and wanted to show the work to others.  Most of the editions were mailed or handed out for free.  I think when he went to San Francisco he would have a couple on consignment at City Lights Bookstore.  They sold for a dollar.  The poets that were featured in the publication are Michael McClure, David Meltzer, Philip Lamantia and others.  Now they’re priceless and it’s very difficult to find the original Semina’s.  Especially one’s that are totally intact. *

My father in the studio or home would work in full concentration and usually with no visitors.  But he liked me to be around while he worked.  I guess to make sure I don’t get myself into trouble or maybe I was amusing to my Dad without distracting him from his work.  What he would do is play 45’s on the portable stereo in his studio.  Like looking for the perfect image for him to use – he also used that aesthetic to find the perfect song.  I think he preferred the single than the album (unless it was jazz or classical).  He used to play Supremes ‘Baby Love’ consistently over and over again.  We’re talking about 25 or 30 times a row.  Other records that stay in my mind are the Kinks’ ‘Who’s Next In Line,’ The Rolling Stones ‘Satisfaction,’ and lots of Motown.   The songs after awhile became ‘trance’ pieces.  I started to lose the melody and got into a trance, and I wonder if my Dad did the same with the music.  It helped him focus on his work. 

Although he loved jazz, my father had a good ear in what was happening around him for someone of his generation.   He wasn’t stuck on the music heroes of his era – Charlie Parker, Billie Holiday, etc.  He also admired David Bowie, Patti Smith (Horses album), early Santana, Roxy Music (he loved ‘For Your Pleasure’) and once insisted on listening to my complete Syd Barrett catalog in one setting.  At the time, EMI put out a double set of his first two solo albums.  He put the records on, adjusted the headphones, and didn’t move for 80 minutes.  Once the records were over, he flipped off the headphones off his head and said ‘pretty good.’

I bring this up because I don’t think any of his friends were into this type of music.  They were into The Beatles  (who wasn’t at the time) of course, but probably not aware of the Punk scene that was brewing just before my Dad’s death.  He had a natural appreciation of what is happening now as well as its past.  There wasn’t a nostalgic bone in his body.  Others of his generation I think were stuck in a time warp.
Musicians seemed to be drawn to his artwork. I think due to the image of the transistor radio in his work.  On the other hand, my father used images of the Rolling Stones, Beatles, Phil Spector, James Brown, and other musicians in his art.  So in a sense, there is a bridge in the artwork between music and the visual aesthetic image.  I think what’s fascinating about my father’s artwork is that it is a visual diary of what’s happening at the time he did the works.  Personal as well as the public.

The personal tend to be displayed in Semina not counting his various postcards he made as art pieces as well as serving the needs to communicate to his friends.  There was a movement around that time to make the United States Postage system a part of the artwork in a conceptual matter of presenting art.  But to my father, it was a way to keep and spread the news about things in his life as well as simply writing a letter to a fellow artist or friend.  The postcards he made are art pieces but also serves as everyday mail.  It would be wrong to see the postcards as art objects themselves without the context that they were also pieces of personal mail.  They were not made to be shown in galleries and museums or anywhere else in public.  Yet the work he made for these ‘message missiles’ do stand up as works of art – as well as a diary of sorts in what was happening in his life, therefore in my Mom and yours truly’s life.

It’s interesting to note that his work in the 50’s and 70’s (right before his death) reflected more on the personal than the public.  Both decades he was involved with making sculptures that deal with the inner world of his art making.  The 60’s work (and part of the 70’s) deal with the outside world – especially with the medium of the verfax machine and the transistor radio.  The radio in a sense is broadcasting images perhaps via music.  It serves as a subjective commentary on the culture and politics of America and beyond.

He would spend a lot of time on one piece.  Sometimes just studying it, or looking at it in different angles.  My mother told me that he would sometimes place the artwork on the ground and would look at it facing backward, but bending his torso so he can see the work between his legs.    Odd angles of course, but why should I argue with genius. 
My father had style when working.  The music just had to be right, the mood perfect, and the moment at hand becomes an inspiration.  As I mentioned he never spoke while working – once in awhile he would have me help him.  Mostly holding the artwork so he can build the frame around it.  I hated doing this because it was so tedious.  Also, it would take him forever to hammer the nail in.  He even studied that for a long time before the hammer hit the nail.  Meanwhile, I had to hold the art so when he’s ready for the right moment, the right feeling, and just before my shoulders were about to give out – bam and then little bams afterward to hammer that perfect nail in that perfect place.  It was great sadness that a particular art collector, owner of some of my Dad’s artwork, had the frames removed and replaced them with shiny metallic ones.   He reportedly said ‘at last, I found the perfect frame for Berman’s artwork.’  Which maybe so, but I went through a lot of boredom and stiff shoulders for those frames – and I like my Dad’s frames better. The collector is lucky that he changed the frames when my Dad died.   If alive he would never approve of the change. 

My father was fanatical about perfection.  That perfection means his artwork.  Dad never took himself seriously; in fact, he was really goofy. But when it comes to his art, he was extremely serious.  Wallace was particularly picky about who buys his work.  For instance, a bank wanted to purchase a piece by my Dad for their corporate art collection, and he said sure.  What he did was made a piece called ‘Bank Statement’ with an image of a woman giving a man a blowjob superimposed over a bank statement.  For some odd reason, the bank refused to purchase the artwork.  Too bad, because I am sure it would have been a great conversation starter in that bank’s next board meeting.

I remember that if someone purchased the artwork, he would show up at that person’s house and hung it up himself.  For him, the work always had to be presented in a certain matter.  It didn’t matter who or what owned the work now – Wallace felt he had control in how that work will be displayed – not the owner.  So in a sense, the owner not only owned the artwork, but they also got the company of my father and his handy skills in hanging (his) artworks on the wall.

Whatever it was due to the failure of the Ferus Gallery exhibition, or just his working relationship with the art world, he refused to have shows at a commercial gallery.   I think he was nervous with respect to being a part of someone else’s business i.e. gallery.   He didn’t want to be in a position where he had to do a show once a year or anyone put him on a schedule to produce art.  He had no problems doing book covers for his friends but didn’t like the idea of a solo show at a commercial gallery.

It’s hard to say why he didn’t want to do this because he rarely if ever commented on the relationship between his work and the gallery system.  I knew he personally loved going to see exhibitions and was friends to numerous art dealers – but for whatever reason, he wasn’t comfortable to be tied to one art dealer.  What he would do instead was bring his artwork to a dealer, told him how much money he wants for it – and the art dealer can sell the work as high as they want to for their financial needs. He didn’t care if they made $20,000 when he wanted $500 out of the deal.  He only knew and desired to get what he wanted out of the deal.  If the art dealer made more out of the deal, that was ok with him.    He wasn’t egotistical or concerned with money matters that way.

The first big art opening that I remembered going to was the Marcel Duchamp retrospective at the Pasadena Museum.  At the time, being only 8 years old, I had not the foggiest idea who this Frenchman was.  Except I loved his bicycle wheel sculpture.  I think any kid would love that art piece.  For the grownups, they had to deal with the theory, humor, and the concept what is and what isn’t art – but to any 8 year old – a bicycle wheel is something to be admired.  And it was nice that this Frenchman took the time to pay tribute to the ‘bicycle wheel.’   To me, at the time he wasn’t important, but when I told my teacher the next morning that I went to this art show in Pasadena and the artist was French and he had this bicycle wheel and I met him – well she was really impressed.  I also noticed that our relationship improved greatly after telling her this fact.   It was the first time that I became aware of fame and how it affected people.

Also, my father was quite charismatic. Women, girls, boys, and men were attracted to him.  To me he was Dad, but to others, he was a god.  I thought that was silly and so did my Father. The thing is that he was quiet, but that quiet made him special to people around him – and it really attracted attention from those who don’t know him as well.   Yet he loathed the spotlight.  Couldn’t care less what people thought of him.   He never did an interview and as far as I know never spoke about his artwork.  Yet he devoured issues of Artforum and books on art.  Like his music knowledge, he knew every ‘ism’ that was out there and usually was for it.

It was the mixture of my Dad being private yet so open to the world that made him a unique personality.  There was absolutely no generation gap between us, and he was very friendly with all of my childhood friends.  I always felt that there was an age (at least in an aesthetic sense) difference with some of my Dad’s friends – but he was sincerely on top of what was happening at the moment – and he loved the moment.

The great pleasure I had with my Father was going to concerts with him.   In 1969 The Rolling Stones went on their first official tour after the death of Brian Jones, who was a friend of my Dad’s.  The tour itself was big news and quite important to teenagers like me at the time.  I went with a girlfriend and somehow bagged a couple of tickets that were in the last row at the Inglewood Forum.   My father offered to drive us to the concert and then asked if he could come too.   I told him that tickets are impossible to get and basically all good seats – if available - are taken; therefore that is why I will be suffering Vertigo in the last row at the Inglewood Forum.  My father paused and said ‘well, we’ll see.’

He dropped us off and we went into the Forum. Our seats were terrible, but my date did bring opera glasses (how posh!).  Just before the show started, I scanned the stadium with the opera glasses to see if I knew anyone in the audience. Focusing on the center of the stage and on the first-row center there sat my Father. Looking very bored and comfortable at the same time.   He never told me how he got that seat. It is one of the mysteries of my life with Father.

Just right before he died he took me to see the New York Dolls with Iggy Pop at the Palladium and got us great tickets to see David Bowie (via Toni Basil) during his ‘Diamond Dogs’ tour. Also Roxy Music’s first big tour during the Country Life album era. Being a huge Bryan Ferry fan, I was amazed to go to an art party (I hate that term, but I can’t think of what to call a party that is full of artists, collectors, and dealers) after the show, and who was there but Ferry with some cover girl by his side. It was probably one of my most glamorous moments as a teenager. So hanging out with my family I saw some great shows. I was very lucky to have parents who were hipper…. than everyone else’s parents!

The drag is that this was not going to last forever.  Lives are spent and then disappear before you know it. So all I have to offer are these memories.
Tosh Berman
June 1, 2002 (copyrighted by Tosh Berman, 2012)

Monday, May 30, 2011

Bill Morgan's "The Beat Generation in New York"

Well, i am in New York City at the moment(s), and its too hot outside to actually do a walking tour- but i think this is the book to bring with you when you are in NYC. Bill Morgan is the official historian of everything that's BEAT. And here he takes you to neighborhood-to-neighborhood to all the Beat haunts and lofts/apartments. As well as the bars, the jazz nightclubs, and various parks where one score Heroin or grass. In other words this is pretty essential travel guide to one of the great cities on this planet. 
The shocking thing is also how much has changed since this book was written (in the 1990's). Buildings don't exist, so what you get is sort of a ghost tour - and Manhattan in many ways is a ghost - but with only respect to memory and history. Its a beautiful form of memory - not my own, but from history. And the Beats, without a doubt, made NYC a strong presence. Even if you don't plan to go to New York City, this book is pretty much an essential document of Beat life. In other words, I love it!