Read Rebels in Paradise Online
Authors: Hunter Drohojowska-Philp
Meanwhile, Glimcher took on Irwin and Kauffman. “They were giving us money and my first show back there, gee whiz, they paid for a first-class airline ticket,” Kauffman said. “I didn't know how to deal with all that.”
27
Glimcher rented a loft for Bell to pursue his glass sculpture in New York. Kauffman rented one on Seventeenth Street in Manhattan that he shared with John McCracken, who also showed with Pace. McCracken, Kauffman, and Ruscha were selected for the Cinquième Biennale de Paris at the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris in 1967. The same year, Kauffman, McCracken, Bell, and Ron Davis were shown with Judd and Flavin in A New Aesthetic at the Washington Gallery of Modern Art. In her catalog essay, critic Barbara Rose claimed their work “portends a brilliant world of color, light, and direct experience.”
28
After Bengston's diva departure from Ferus, he broke his back in a motorcycle accident, which left him paralyzed for four days. He had remained friends with the soft-hearted Bell and, unable to live on his own, slept on Bell's couch for four months, utterly alienating Bell's new wife. “He was awful, cranky,” Bell recalled. “His mother knitted me a beautiful afghan, which I still have, for taking care of him.”
29
Disciplined in his physical habits, Bengston rehabilitated himself by putting on his motorcycle leathers and boots and running up and down the stairs to his studio thirty times a day. He'd then ride his bike for four hours. A few months later, he began an even less conventional form of physical therapy by going out dancing at the different clubs on the Strip. “I was sort of a dance hall slut at the time. I'd work out in the day and go dancing at night. At that time, the Whisky, Gazzaris, Ciro's were dance clubs. Primarily rock 'n' roll, Ike and Tina Turner, the Temptations, stuff you could really wing with,” he later said.
30
Bengston was on hand for one of the legendary performances of Otis Redding, who stomped the stage so hard that the whole club filled with dust rising from the floor. In 1966, Whisky a Go Go owner Elmer Valentine had Redding and his ten-piece Memphis band for four nights of performances that were remembered as legendary after the twenty-six-year-old Redding died the following year in a plane crash. Ry Cooder played in the opening act, Rising Suns, and recalled that it was a “super hot show, nothing like anyone had seen in Los Angeles.”
31
Ann Marshall in front of Billy Al Bengston painting at actor Sterling Holloway's house in 1965
Photograph courtesy of Billy Al Bengston
One night, Bengston went to Ciro's to hear the Byrds, who were friends with Mary Lynch Kienholz and involved with the Ferus scene. Bengston hung out with Teri Garr, Ann Marshall, and Toni Basil. Though romantically involved with Garr, he was such close friends with all of them that he eventually combined their initials to name his daughter: Blue Ticaâstanding for Teri, Toni, Isherwood, Cliff, Ann, and Altoon. “They were tremendously energetic those girls, they were real trouble,” he recalled.
32
Garr and Basil were professional dancers working in beach-party movies and television shows such as
The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour
, but they were happy to meet him several nights a week to continue dancing into the early morning hours.
They were not strangers to the art world. Through Hopper, years earlier, Garr had been drafted to read Michael McClure's
The Beard
in the loft above the carousel on the Santa Monica Pier. Bengston already knew Hopper, Dean Stockwell, and Peter Fonda but then grew friendly with Jack Nicholson through Garr and Basil, who took acting classes with him. Nicholson wrote the slim script
The Trip
for Roger Corman. Largely a montage of psychedelic special effects, the movie starred Fonda as a director of TV commercialsâbad karma from the POV of the sixtiesâwho is given acid by his friends Hopper and Bruce Dern. Nicholson also wrote a part for Garr in his next psychedelic movie
Head
, a vehicle for the Monkeys. Nicholson remained in touch with the Ferus artists through Ann Marshall, who became his girl Friday in the late sixties after her friend Michelle Phillips had left him. (Nicholson rarely collected contemporary art, preferring Picasso or the erotica of Tamara de Lempicka. However, one Christmas, he bought a large suite of watercolors from Bengston to send to friends as presents.)
Bengston, who titled his radiant enamel paintings after Hollywood personalitiesâHumphrey, Zachary, Busbyâwent on to date Diane Varsi of
Peyton Place
and Bobbi Shaw, who had a role in
Beach Blanket Bingo.
Bengston introduced Shaw's roommate Babs Lunine to John Altoon, who was divorced by Fay Spain in 1962. Lunine's upper-middle-class East Coast background was more boarding school than bohemian, though she majored in art history at the University of Miami before moving to Los Angeles in 1964. She was seventeen years younger than Altoon and was so wholesome and blonde that both Bengston and Altoon referred to her affectionately as “Fluffy.” She married Altoon in 1965.
Bengston, too, settled down. His girlfriend, Penny Little, was registrar of the Pasadena Art Museum. After leaving Ferus, Bengston represented himself, showing and selling out of his studio as well as loaning work for gallery and museum exhibitions. Little helped him organize a system for keeping track of his work. (He had had such difficulties getting work returned that he asked the Whitney Museum of American Art to pay him for loaning his work to their prestigious biennial exhibition. The museum refused.)
Handsome and charismatic, Bengston had little difficulty selling his own work for sizable sums. The work was strongly backed by critics such as John Coplans, who wrote, “It would not be too much to say that by the early sixties Bengston had probably extended the notion of a complex synthetic order of color far in advance of anyone else working at the time.”
33
After he had finished a group of what he termed “Dentos”âsheets of thin metal that he had beaten with a ball-peen hammer and then sprayed with lapidary-colored patterns of lacquerâhe agreed to a show in 1970 with Riko Mizuno, who had split from a partnership with Eugenia Butler to open her own gallery at 669 North La Cienega Boulevard. Bengston insisted that the show be lit only by candles on stands that he had built so that flickering illumination would cast changing shadows over the glistening, irregular surfaces of the Dentos. Unfortunately, the paintings could barely be seen at all. “That went over like a turd in a punch bowl,” he said.
34
It was his only show there. “I always felt that I was the best,” he later said, with a dry laugh. “I think everyone would agree with me that I had a very inflated opinion of myself.⦠I burned a lot of bridges and was very, very stupid.”
35
Â
CHAPTER SEVEN
Glamour Gains Ground
In the early 1960s, Larry Bell worked part-time at the Unicorn coffeehouse on Sunset Boulevard, walking distance from Barney's. The Kingston Trio and Judy Henske performed regularly at the Unicorn, but the acoustic scene was about to give way to electric rock. It was at the coffeehouse that a well-to-do young man with a tenor voice, David Crosby, met producer Jim Dickson, who put him together with Jim (later Roger) McGuinn, Gene Clark, Michael Clarke, and Chris Hillman, an electric folk-pop group conceived of as the “American Beatles” but known, by 1964, as the Byrds. Dickson was friends with Dennis Hopper, also a regular at the Unicorn. “That is where I first heard âHowl' read by Ginsberg. And Freddy Engelberg was playing guitar,” Hopper recalled.
1
Engelberg also acted in
The Beat Generation
with Fay Spain, Altoon's first wife, before releasing two albums of his own music.
Occasionally, Bell played his own twelve-string guitar at the Unicorn and hung out with the musicians. Since he watched the door, he would slip in friends for free, including the Grinsteins. Hopps had brought them to Bell's studio with the warning, “Listen, this is going to look really weird to you but you have to believe it's art.”
2
The Grinsteins embraced the artist and the era. Elyse declared, “We were straight Westsiders but we were changed by the sixties.”
3
Though raised on jazz and swing, they had no problem moving on to rock and roll when Johnny Winter played the Whisky a Go Go.
At Bell's suggestion, they dropped by the Unicorn one night to watch comedian Lenny Bruce, his sharp features softened from alcohol and drugs. He was friendly with Altoon, who lived near the club. Hopper, a staunch supporter of Bruce's incendiary monologues, was there that night. He was infuriated when authorities intervened. “They dragged him off the fucking stage,” Bell recalled.
4
Bruce was determined to use obscenity in his stand-up act, and the police in various cities were just as determined to stop him. Sherman Block, who later became L.A. County sheriff, arrested Bruce on the charge of violating California's obscenity law at a 1962 performance at the Troubadour on Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood. Less than two weeks later Bruce faced charges in Chicago following a show at the Gate of Horn. Later in 1962 he was arrested again in Los Angeles for a performance at the Unicorn. “Here I am, living up to my public image,” wrote a defiant Bruce. “A true professional never disappoints his public.”
5
Bruce's many influential friends included magazine publisher and freedom of speech champion Hugh Hefner, who serialized Bruce's
How to Talk Dirty and Influence People
in
Playboy
. Bruce's greatest supporter was twenty-five-year-old record producer Phil Spector, whose “wall of sound” was perfected in Los Angeles with the Ronettes' “Be My Baby.”
Spector had moved to Los Angeles from New York in 1963 because he had “tired of the condescension of East Coast session men, and now welcomed the chance to work with the younger, hipper musicians of Hollywood.”
6
There were more independent labels recording folk, pop, and rock music in Los Angeles than anywhere else in the country. Spector saw his opportunity and broke the rules of recording by “pushing volume levels way into the red, packing the studio with musicians and instruments, devoting hours to each song.”
7
He scorned conservatives fighting Bruce's scathing free-form monologues about religion and race in America. (After Bruce was found dead of a heroin overdose in 1966, Spector bought the paparazzi photographs of his bloated body to outmaneuver the media. Spector himself went to jail in 2009 for the murder of actress and House of Blues hostess Lana Clarkson.)
Hopper identified with Bruce's expressed feeling of persecution. Like Bruce, he had a reputation for escalating drug use. After eighty-five takes of one scene in the 1958 film
From Hell to Texas
, director Henry Hathaway spread the word that he was difficult. By the early 1960s, Hopper was not getting as many offers to act and, inspired by Kienholz, started to make collages and assemblages. The opening of his show at the Primus Stuart Gallery brought out friends Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward. It was as a photographer, however, that Hopper's true talent emerged.
Before marrying Hopper in 1961 at Jane Fonda's New York apartment, his fiancée Brooke had bought him a 35 mm Nikon camera for his birthday. She recalled, “It turned out that he was as natural a photographer as he was an actor, constantly taking pictures of everything and everyone he came into contact with that intrigued him.”
8
After Hopper lost his paintings in the 1961 Bel Air fire, he dedicated himself to photography. “The artists wanted to be photographed,” he recalls, “while the actors were used to it and I, for one, felt like it was often intrusive.”
9
He spent his considerable free time hanging around Ferus and taking photographs of the artists. “Light” artist Irwin with a lightbulb in his mouth, luxe Bell wearing striped trousers and two-tone spectator shoes, cool Ruscha posed in front of a shop with a neon sign. In 1963, Hopper's photographs were reproduced in
Artforum
with the bravura endorsement: “Welcome brave new images!”
Hopper was hitchhiking on Sunset Boulevard one day when William Claxton, driving his Ford convertible, stopped to pick him up. They had not met previously but synched quickly over their mutual love of photography and jazz. When they reached Hopper's house at the top of steep Kings Road, Hopper invited Claxton in and Claxton spent the afternoon photographing the rebellious actor. Both were fans of Charlie Parker, whom Claxton had photographed countless times at the Tiffany Club. “The Bird” fascinated Claxton with his tough demeanor and angelic face. Hopper, too, hung around jazz clubs, including the Renaissance opened by Benny Shapiro.