Venice and the next 100 years
By Pano
Douvos
The Golden Age of Venice for me
was the late 60’s and through most of the 70’s. The highlight was
the glorious Venice Canals Festival. The free-wheeling “open house”
celebration captured the spirit of that special time. It epitomized the arts
ferment and the counter-culture activism. Jim Morrison and the
“Doors” set the tone playing on the boardwalk at the Cheetah, a
large hall with a dramatic 20-30 foot high wine-colored curtain.
Venice was being re-energized by the
creative artists musicians and poets who began to gather. At John Haag’s
Venice West Café important Beat-Poets such as Jack Hirshman and Stewart
Perkoff read their work. In scattered studios artists Billy Al Bengston, Ken
Price, De Wayne Valentine, Fred Eversley and Ed Gilliam were completing prime
sculpture and paintings.
Hot hangouts
formed at the boardwalk’s Sidewalk Café, the Earth Rose Headshop of
poet Steve Richmond and at the La Fayette Café. The spacious Gas House
Coffee Shop was memorable for its energetic paintings plus the dude reclining on
pillows in the decorated bath tub, serenely reading his book...(The Gas House
was torn down ages ago.)
A
“small village” atmosphere flavored Venice at the time. People
walked talked made art, music and love not war. Individualist in free-expression
mode continue to congregate but the “bump-into-friends” aspect may
have changed some and shifted, but the vitality remains.
The Venice Canals Festivals were a
festive time for sure, the many diverse activities difficult to encapsulate. The
celebrations held in late summer I believe for 4-5 years in the late 70’s,
covered a 3 or 4 day period. The original canal summer cottages had been rented
then fixed up into a bohemian low-rent haven. Chianti wine and recreational
drugs flowed. Every other cottage became a mini-band stand or art gallery,
that’s with ducks...(and their contributions).
To get the visuals, you see
artistically decorated quarters, red canoes, multi-colored ducks, in brilliant
sunshine and clean sea air. There’s at least four canals and maybe eight
picturesque bridges. Now add a swirling band of open friendly people. That mix
would be my cottage-renting friends Rick Sinatra, Osah Harmon and Danielle
Greco. Mary Lou Johnson owned her house and succeeded in holding out against all
buyers.
I moved into inner-Venice when
I joined the Venice Beyond Baroque Poetry Workshop and later wrote with the
staff on the Free Venice Beachhead. The poets I met include Tom Waits and Wanda
Coleman. I later became acquainted with John Doe and Exene Cervenka of the Band
X. I sculpted a portrait-bust of Exene...at the Beachhead Arnold Springer was
the most equal among equals. Those writing and contributing on the staff were
Chuck Bloomquist, Moe Stavnezer, Olga Palo, Osan Harman and myself amongst
other.
I great picture of the people
and history of Venice can be found in the book “Call Someplace
Paradise” by Pat Hartman. It can be ordered at Small-World Books or
through www.Xlibris.com. Hartman’s book is chock full of engrossing
anecdotes of Venice and its spirited locals. I could have been one of her
characters but she failed to record my participation in the Venice Nude-Beach
scene (of the early 70’s if I remember
right.)
Happening spots in Golden Age Venice
included live music at the Come Back Inn on West Washington, now Abbot Kinney.
Across the street was the perfect home for rhythm and blues in a righteous wood
floored down and dirty establishment, the Taurus Tavern. It should be a
historical landmark, but it is a chichi restaurant.
A living landmark is Swami X. He was a
long-time feature standing on the benches down on the boardwalk. He presided for
years, offering his very clever material of a radical political and lusty-vibe
kind. He peppered his delivery with the attack humor of a stand-up comic. Today
he sometimes contributes, mainly poetry, to the
Beachhead.
I was introduced to the aura
of Venice at the Church-in-Ocean Park at a performance night. Goldie Glitters
was the transvestite master of ceremonies, on stage bare to the waist with a
jewel in his navel. He later was chosen Homecoming Queen at Santa Monica
college.
At neighboring Synanon, a
large drug-rehab center, Saturday nights were music concert nights. The
music-heavy clients formed top-notch groups and rocked. The nights were always
well attended. One client told me that I didn’t know life if I had never
been down in “Junky
Hell.”
I experienced Venice as a
mostly a laid back if lively place. The only riot I saw was a police riot on a
July 4th holiday some 10 to 15 years ago. An out of control cop was waving his
gun around. He had this black kid handcuffed and pinned down on his stomach on
the boardwalk. He suddenly just hauls-off and boots the kid on the side of his
head...forget that he was surrounded by a crowd of beach-goers.
Bill Attaway is a hard-working Venice
artist currently producing large 20 foot tall ceramic sculptures, with a
totem-like piece recently located near the beach west of Windward Ave. One day
he allowed me to assist him by adding a small ceramic piece to a large wall
mosaic he installed near Muscle Beach. He continues the Venice art heritage, as
does my long-time friend Emily Winters, well noted for her large wall murals
which can be seen in several prominent locations. She is an activist citizen of
Venice and a stabilizing force as chairman of the Venice Arts Council, marked by
her present task of curating “the Venice Artist about Venice”
exhibit - the opening reception will be at SPARC on July 9th, 6 to 9 pm.
Bravos here go to Steve Clare for his
commitment to his low-cost housing efforts and also to Jim Smith for his
Beachhead and political organizing efforts. Also kudos for Arnold Springer and
Moe Stavnezer who forced the builder into including needed low-cost housing and
inside parking in the building I live in. They’re to be commended for
their long-time Venice activism.
Possibly the counter-culture community
changes, but Venetian Veteranos remain to fight the good fight, thus sustaining
the uniqueness of Venice. A June KCET Program on beaches gave a national Number
One rating to the Venice “Mardi-Gras” Boardwalk and
Beach.
The Venice Canals Festivals were
shut down by the powers-that-be in one big misguided change. The festival was a
beautiful sharing time in a beautiful setting. A vision of a better future. We
memorialize the past 100 years, but the future also needs tending.
Venetians could be catalysts for
change to a co-operative peaceful society. Women could influence their sisters
to get out of the Army...then influence the testosterone tribe to say no to war.
We won’t go.
Conflict resolution
by arbitration will stop war senselessness. Venice America can be the
small-acorn start of a Venice Sunshine Festival for all the world.
Posted: Fri - July 1, 2005 at 10:05 AM