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Wild Current is Blooming Pink, The Odyssey Found at Random

by Joanne Kyger

     You are in search of some simple way to find your home
         but the old gods reach out with their stories and resentments
               and so your journey will be troublesome
                   and, frankly, endless
                       for you will go on to meet people
                          who have never heard of you         

                               Caught inland
                                    by the outgoing long tide

            Where you will find a place to plant some seeds
          And tell your story all over

          And give a bit of sacrifice
     so those dead ones
can speak

Larry Keenan, Jr.

photograph by Larry Keenan, Jr.

Larry Keenan, Jr: is an internationally noted San Francisco Bay Area photographer who graduated with highest honors from the California College of Arts and Crafts in 1967, majoring in Design and Education. He photographed the final days of the Beat Generation. A selection of his “Beat Era” work is in the permanent collection of the Archives of American Artists in the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. In 1971, he won the James D. Phelan Award the most prestigious award bestowed upon California born artists. His award winning photographs have appeared in numerous ad campaigns, corporate and professional publications, CD and record albums, books, magazine covers, and top selling software packages. He has received awards from Graphis, Art Direction, and Communication Arts magazines as well as excellence awards from the N.Y. Art Directors Club.

Wallace Berman

Untitled 112, 1964-76, single negative photographic image, 6-1/2"x6-1/2" by Wallace Berman

Wallace Berman: was born on Staten Island, New York in 1926. In the 1930s his family moved to Los Angeles. In the early 1940s he became involved in the West Coast jazz scene. He attended classes at Jepson Art Institute and Chouinard Art Institute in the 1940s. Then for a few years he worked in a furniture factory. It was there that he began creating sculptures from wood scraps. This led to him becoming a full time artist by the early 1950s and involved in the Beat Movement. He moved from Los Angeles to San Francisco in late 1957 where he mostly focused on his magazine Semina, which consisted of collages mixed with poetry by writers Michael McClure, Philip Lamantia, David Meltzer, Charles Bukowski, William S. Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, Jean Cocteau, and himself, which he published under the pseudonym Pantale Xantos. In 1965 he moved to Topanga Canyon and started creating his series of Verifax Collages. Director Dennis Hopper, a collector of his work, gave him a small role in his 1968 film “Easy Rider.” He produced work until his sudden death in a car accident caused by a drunk driver in 1976. His involvement with the jazz scene allowed him opportunities to work with jazz musicians, creating bebop album covers for Charlie Parker. His likeness appears in the second row of the Beatles’ 1967 “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” album cover. The portrait is from a photograph taken by Dean Stockwell. It is directly above John Lennon, two rows up, next to Tony Curtis. In 1992, his papers were donated to the Archives of American Art by his son, Tosh Berman.

Robert Ronnie Branaman

Night in Tunisia, etching by Robert Branaman

Robert Ronnie Branaman: is a Beat Generation poet, painter, and film producer who continues to make avant garde art today. A Kansas native, he was an integral part of the Wichita Vortex, a group of the Beat Generation that involved Charles Plymell and Michael McClure. His work includes etchings, paintings, films, books, and most recently a series of limited edition digital / traditional prints. He showed at the legendary Batman Gallery in San Francisco, was part of Michael McClure’s play ! The Feast ! and his paintings were featured in Oliver Stone’s film The Doors. His films include Ginsberg (1966) and Goldmouth (1965) starring Lawrence Ferlinghetti. He presently lives and works in Santa Monica. In Spring 2010 he had a show of his paintings at Beyond Baroque in Los Angeles.