Rainy Day Psychedelia: Seattle’s 1960s Poster Scene Gets Its Day in the Sun

June 23rd, 2014

Most people associate the words “Seattle music scene” with bands like Soundgarden, Nirvana, and Pearl Jam. In the 1980s and ’90s, they made the city and its suburbs a hotbed of so-called grunge rock, in the same way—and at the same time—that Microsoft and Starbucks inextricably linked the region to high tech and caffeine. But in the late 1960s, Seattle was no different than most other American cities, filled with freaks looking to break on through to the other side, which they did whenever the Doors, Jefferson Airplane, Grateful Dead, and a host of local bands took the stages of places like Eagles Auditorium.

“For me, it’s almost like a modern-day type of folk art.”

Naturally, posters designed to appeal to this mind-altered audience were created for many of these shows. About 200 of these works of graphic art have been collected into a book by artist Scott McDougall called “Split Fountain Hieroglyphics: Psychedelic Concert Posters From the Seattle Area, 1966-1969.” Designed by Glen Beebe, the 9-by-12-inch hardbound volume is out now.

For McDougall, “Split Fountain Hieroglyphics,” which takes the first part of its title from a printing technique that produces a rainbow effect, has been a wouldn’t-it-be-nice pipe dream since almost the day he arrived in Seattle in 1980. During that decade, even when he was toiling as a freelance advertising illustrator, he always had an eye on the city’s graphic-arts scene, in particular its poster past and present. “I’d never even met a poster collector until I moved to Seattle,” McDougall says in reference to the vitality of the scene he discovered there. “I thought I was the only one.”

Little is known about artist Gary Eagle, who designed both the poster above and the poster at top, but his work was an important part of Seattle's psychedelic poster scene of the late 1960s.

Little is known about artist Gary Eagle, who designed both the poster above and the poster at top, but his work was an important part of Seattle’s psychedelic poster scene of the late 1960s.

Seattle’s most prolific and influential graphic artist at the time was Art Chantry, whose “Stark Reminders” exhibition had a big impact on McDougall (Chantry penned the foreword to McDougall’s book). Sharing an interest in Seattle’s late-1960s rock posters, McDougall and Chantry started photographing everything from the era they could get their hands on. Many of those photographs, along with images loaned by the Experience Music Project and private collectors, are included in “Split Fountain Hieroglyphics.”

Even though he had embraced Seattle as his new home, McDougall was taken by what seemed to him the obvious influences of San Francisco’s rock-poster artists. “The San Francisco guys were so much further ahead of everybody else,” he says. “They spawned the scenes in Detroit, Austin, all those places. Almost every American city was like a year behind San Francisco. Seattle was no exception.”

At the time, San Francisco-based artists such as Wes Wilson, Stanley Mouse, Victor Moscoso, and Rick Griffin were creating vividly colored psychedelic posters for concerts at venues like the Fillmore Auditorium and Avalon Ballroom. McDougall’s book will point out those similarities but it will also catalog the key differences, revealing, in the process, the traits that made the work of the Seattle artists distinct from their counterparts to the south.

Walt Crowley designed two of the four posters created for the Sky River Rock Festival in 1968, including this one. The outdoor festival is thought to have given East Coast promoters the idea for Woodstock, which was held in 1969.

Walt Crowley designed two of the four posters created for the Sky River Rock Festival in 1968, including this one. The outdoor festival is thought to have given East Coast promoters the idea for Woodstock, which was held in 1969.

McDougall comes by his unique perspective thanks to a life spent in both places, or at least almost so. The artist and author grew up on the far fringes of the San Francisco rock-poster movement, which is to say Eureka and Fresno, 275 miles to the north and 200 miles to the southeast, respectively. It was during those formative years that McDougall began his lifelong love of rock posters, both as a collector and creator.

“I lived in Eureka until 1969,” he says of his elementary and junior-high-school years. A budding artist and avid surfer when he was barely into his teens, McDougall’s older brother took him to concerts at Humboldt State, where he saw bands like the Loading Zone and performers like Sandy Bull. Naturally he picked up the posters for those shows, as well as ones he found in town. “There was a bookstore in Eureka that carried Fillmore posters and an import store that carried Family Dog, Berkeley Bonaparte, and those big ‘personality’ posters. I worked at a printing company in the summer near the import store, so I’d go there every time I got paid and buy a roll of posters. It just kept going from there.”

In addition to admiring the products of the San Francisco scene from afar, McDougall had a few close encounters with some of the people who were actually making the scene happen. “I came home from school one day,” he recalls, “I was probably 13, and there was this panel truck parked in front of my next-door neighbor’s house. I knew right away it was the Family Dog panel truck because Mouse had painted the sides and Griffin had painted the roof, which was a giant poppy flower. My jaw just dropped.”

According to author and artist Scott McDougall, John Moehring, who designed this poster for a 1968 Donovan concert, was one of the best Seattle poster artists of the late 1960s.

According to author and artist Scott McDougall, John Moehring, who designed this poster for a 1968 Donovan concert, was one of the best Seattle poster artists of the late 1960s.

Turns out it was Luria Castell, one of the founders of the Family Dog, which produced all the shows at the Avalon Ballroom, accompanied by her boyfriend. The couple was paying a visit on McDougall’s next-door neighbor because the latter was a real-estate agent. “They were looking at a place in rural southern Humboldt County. This was way before people were growing pot there. They were the first hippies I’d ever met, and they were way out there. I told them I was really interested in their posters, and they opened the door of the truck. The ceiling was literally wallpapered with early Family Dog posters. She pulled three of them off the ceiling for me. That was pretty neat.”

“I’d never even met a poster collector until I moved to Seattle. I thought I was the only one.”

In 1969, McDougall’s family moved to Fresno, where he attended high school and founded a company called Come Get It! Graphics with a friend named Tommy Cook. “I made a few trips to San Francisco to hear music and look for posters,” he recalls of his Fresno years, “but by 1969 and ’70, there was very little to be found. In 1967, psychedelic posters were on the cover of every magazine, it was a huge deal. By 1969, most people didn’t want to be associated with the stuff. Even the bands were moving away from it.”

McDougall and Cook designed everything from concert posters to murals for waterbed stores to billboards for radio stations. Then, in 1975, McDougall left Fresno, “never to return,” as he puts it today, for Crescent City, which is north of Eureka by about 80 miles. “I was a printer, I played in a band, and I was a surfer,” he says. “Mostly I was in Crescent City because I was a surfer—there weren’t too many of us up there. Our band had two horns and two string players, and three of these people played foot-powered percussion instruments, like a bass drum, a hi-hat, that kind of stuff. I played electric trombone and the saw. It was kind of goofy.”

The self-deprecating credit at the bottom of this 1968 poster by Walt Crowley ("The Shoddy Art Company") could suggest the artist's ambivalence about even being considered an artist.

The self-deprecating credit at the bottom of this 1968 poster by Walt Crowley (“The Shoddy Art Company”) could suggest the artist’s ambivalence about even being considered an artist.

It was in Crescent City that McDougall met his future wife, Susan. After they married, and with work for graphic artists at a premium in northern California, the couple left  the area in 1980 and settled in Seattle, where they eventually raised two daughters. With bills to pay, McDougall turned to advertising illustration, but only until he had the reputation and experience to pursue projects that were closer to his heart, such as covers for Seattle’s legendary music magazine, “The Rocket,” catalogs for a vintage shop called Ruby Montana’s Pinto Pony, and more than 50 CD and album covers for the Grateful Dead.

All the while, Seattle’s psychedelic rock posters from the 1960s were in the back of his mind. Pure originality, he quickly understood, was not what made them so interesting to acolytes of the form. Instead, their Holy Grail-like scarcity had made them highly collectible, while their homegrown feel—which borders, at times, on the amateurish—had made them unusually beloved. “For me, it’s almost like a modern-day type of folk art,” he says. “In the late 1960s, people were only just learning how to do color separation, which resulted in some pretty bizarre stuff. I can relate because it’s how I’ve always learned—by looking at posters, talking to printers, and trying to figure out how they were done, almost like reverse engineering.”

Another twist was the fact that not all of the 20 or so Seattle-area artists whose work is so prized by collectors today were even committed to being artists in the first place. “Many of the poster artists up here were poster artists by default,” McDougall says. “They weren’t necessarily trying to achieve the fame and recognition of the artists in the Bay Area. A lot of them were just kids and people who worked for underground newspapers like ‘Helix.’ They turned out some very interesting work, taking bits and pieces from here and there, and then coming up with their own styles. In the end, though, you could probably blame a lot of what happened up here on Wes Wilson and Stanley Mouse.”

Rock-band manager Matthew Katz promoted shows in Seattle as "San Francisco Sound." Unlike at Eagles Auditorium, posters such as this one by Wallace Studio were produced for each concert, but the enterprise lasted barely half a year.

Rock-band manager Matthew Katz promoted shows in Seattle as “San Francisco Sound.” Unlike at Eagles Auditorium, posters such as this one by Wallace Studio were produced for each concert, but the enterprise lasted barely half a year.

Seattle’s counterparts to those famous artists are people like John Moehring, Walt Crowley, and Gary Eagle, who are household names, but only in the homes of tie-dyed-in-the-wool, certifiable poster geeks.

“John Moehring was, I think, quite a ways ahead of everybody else as far as skill,” McDougall says. “He did a lot of the Eagles Auditorium posters, and you can just see his evolution, from his first one-color jobs to his last four-color posters, which were hand-separated using four negatives, four positives, and a bottle of opaque ink. He also did a poster for the Retina Light Circus with Wes Wilson, which everybody always dates to 1966. Wes’s part may have been from 1966, but John wasn’t even drawing in 1966, at least not like that.”

“Many of the poster artists up here were poster artists by default.”

Nor were promoters at venues like Eagles Auditorium especially diligent about printing posters for every one of their shows, let alone marketing these posters to the public. “I don’t think any of this stuff was ever for sale,” McDougall says of the rock posters of the day. “I could be wrong about the shows promoted by Matthew Katz, who managed Jefferson Airplane, Moby Grape, and It’s a Beautiful Day, because that was sort of his whole business venture. He produced a poster every week, but it only lasted for five or six months. In contrast, there were a lot of shows at the Eagles that never had posters, and most of those were probably done at the last minute.”

In addition to Moehring, another artist whose work is highly sought by collectors is Walt Crowley, who was Moehring’s good friend, sometimes his collaborator, and, as McDougall says, was “one of those guys who was an artist by default, but definitely competent. Crowley did two of the Sky River posters,” he adds, referring to the famous 1968 rock festival held outside Seattle, which may or may not have given promoters on the East Coast the idea to hold Woodstock in upstate New York the following year. “In the 1980s, Crowley became a TV news commentator. He was always the guy on the left. He wrote a number of books, and a lot of articles for HistoryLink.org. That’s what he was really into. He only did the art because nobody else would.”

A particularly vivid John Moehring poster for a 1967 Big Brother and the Holding Company concert at Eagles Auditorium. Retina Circus did the light show.

A particularly vivid John Moehring poster for a 1967 Big Brother and the Holding Company concert at Eagles Auditorium. Retina Circus did the light show.

Less is known about Gary Eagle, whose style at times suggests a fondness for the equiluminant color strategies practiced by Victor Moscoso, while a number of the posters and flyers in “Split Fountain Hieroglyphics” remain completely unattributed.

And then, abruptly, as the ’60s turned into the ’70s, Seattle’s psychedelic era was over. “The bands that were passing through town on tour had outgrown Eagles Auditorium, so a lot of shows started going into bigger venues at the Seattle Center, which had the Coliseum. But mostly the scene ended because the artwork changed, basically overnight. It went from this hippy-dippy stuff that was all hand-drawn to screenprinted production work. Almost all of it was done by the Washington Poster Company, which made signage for produce departments in grocery stores, plus posters for three out of the four Jimi Hendrix shows in Seattle, including that really ugly one from 1970 for his last concert in Seattle at Sick’s Stadium. The bands were interesting, but the artwork was almost nonexistent.”

These days, his book behind him, McDougall is still not sure who designed one particular flyer—if his hunch is correct, the attribution could add a veneer of literary respectability to Seattle’s sometimes scruffy, homegrown poster scene.

This flyer from 1966 may have been prepared by novelist Tom Robbins.

This flyer from 1966 may have been prepared by novelist Tom Robbins.

The piece in question is an 8 1/2-by-11-inch flyer dated August 20, 1966, and titled “A Low-Calorie Human Sacrifice to the Goddess Minnie Mouse.” Produced by “gear works Press,” the flyer promotes “A Happening Created for the Kirkland Summer Arts Festival by Tom Robbins, in Association With the Shazam Society.” Yes, that’s the same Tom Robbins who would go on to write such bestselling novels as “Another Roadside Attraction” (1971) and “Even Cowgirls Get the Blues” (1976).

“I haven’t been able to reach him,” sighs McDougall. “I want to get his two cents worth on it. A few people have told me that he did the piece, but I want to be sure before I put his name on it. I don’t want to step on anyone’s toes.”

(To order a copy of “Split Fountain Hieroglyphics,” visit Scott McDougall’s website.)

SFH Cover

25 comments so far

  1. Sean Bellin Says:

    Very cool article on the posters and Ben you have a great collection yourself , as ive seen!!

  2. Wes Wilson Says:

    Cool! Thanks for sharing! – Wes Wilson

  3. Brad Kelly Says:

    Way to go, Scott! Congrats on the book!

  4. Frank Sipes Says:

    Brilliant, love your work. Congratulations on he book seems we’ve all gone a long ways since “71” in Fresno and to use one of my favorite quotes “what a long strange trip it has been.”

  5. Tommy Cook Says:

    Finally! a book ,glad to see you are still dedicated.. or should I say stuck in the psychedelic poster scene in fact you ARE the scene these days. Keep it up and stay as cool as you always were.

  6. Chris Marsall Says:

    I can’t wait for the book. A photo of EVERY poster I am in search of :)

  7. Buddy Foley Says:

    Great article…I got to Seattle in 1966 Fall to go to UW. I had been in bands in the Portland Oregon area and made the posters for our Bands. I knew Walt Crowley well and hired him to do graphics for my multimedia shows at UW. He was super talented. I also knew Tom Robbins a.d got to have lunch at his house. I will contact him reguarding the poster. I took acid and went to ALL those shows in Seattle. I collect band posters too and have Walt’s Sky River one. I can be reached at buddy.foley@yahoo.com.

  8. Gregory M. Albert Says:

    “Very Clean”! :-) It was nice to have collected these posters at one time. I am grateful that you have assembled these for many people to enjoy again. Thanks as well to all of the artist that made them. I know the book will be excellent as you are a very committed artist yourself. Thank you for the preview. Greg “Prince Of Light Psychedelic Light Show” 3~OM

  9. Bowen Lyman Says:

    Aloha,
    Great article! My father Kenvin Lyman did posters in Utah and light shows so this resonates with my DNA. It was always something that made my dad cool but since we lost him a couple years ago to a fall it helps me feel closer somehow.
    I recently acquired some of his Led Zep posters that were a limited reprint I will post in show and tell. I also have some originals of different stuff. I love any Big Brother anything, reprints anything. I would like to find someone that would like to purchase a bundle of the Zep prints, also wanting to send a copy to Mr Plant and Mr Page. Any suggestions comments or stories would be so appreciated!
    I love this shit.

  10. Gary Houston Says:

    Scott, thanks for the link. Glad this labor of love is reaching it’s completion. And to have Ben write it up. Pretty nice score. Will be checking in to the kickstarter page. Like all that you do, this rings with true love and it comes from your heart.
    I’ve never known you to do anything half-assed.

  11. Gwyllm Llwydd Says:

    Truly beautiful works. I have made a study of the various poster scenes from the times, and these rank right up with London & San Francisco from that period.

    It’s nice to see the North West getting some exposure and recognition. I hope more works become known from this obviously thriving scene!

    Cheers,
    GL

  12. John Platko Says:

    Great project, I wish you all the best with it.

    Do you know who any of the artists who worked for AA Sales Inc, Seattle were? Actually I’d be interested in any information about AA Sales Inc.

  13. Glenn Schoenmakers Says:

    I went to the Sky River Festival in 1968, I snuck as many others did. Actually I don’t even remember any one collecting tickets. I went to Eagles starting with a black venue, 4 Tops, Wilson Pickitt etc. Then it changed to the drug culture with the Fugs appearing first. I went every week for years, Most I snuck into. There were about 3 ways. Withe 4 Tops, the door we snuck through put us right on stage with them. I have a handbill from Sky River that I have never been able to find info about – it lists all of the bands and is printed on both sides. I think it must be rare but I can’t find and info about it. Can anyone help me?

  14. Thomas Hughes Says:

    Matthew Katz had the shows he promoted in 1968 at the Encore Ballroom on Capitol Hill in Seattle. (14th and Pike St.)

  15. Don Edge Says:

    I have a John Moehring poster for the 1967 First Trips Festival held on March 19th at Eagles. It is a hand silk screened black light poster on thick card stock and I believe it was used inside the venue to show the effects of a black light. The Seeds were the headliners and this event was the ice breaker for future Psychedelic shows at the Eagles and Seattle. I also grew up in Seattle next door to Jacques Moitoret who designed several concert posters and Helix covers.

  16. Scott the Organfreak Says:

    One of my favorite poster artists at the time (and he is to this day a brilliant artist) is Jacques Thornton Moitoret. He did The Other Famous Sky River Poster, the last of which sold recently for $1,200. My own original copy deteriorated on my wall over th course of thirty years. Moitoret was in the same posse of nuts that ran the famous-at-the-time psychedelic band, Juggernaut. I myself was the sound man at Eagles for one glorious year.

  17. mike v Says:

    great article i learned some things and I just found a gary eagle concert poster at a yard sale lucky me…. the exact one you have listed at the top never heard of him or the bands on it but the artist work is awesome right up there with the best in the day…….

  18. John Moehring Says:

    I should probably never Google myself for fear of finding my likeness on a nefarious outlaw wanted posting of some sort, but it was with humility I read the kind words written about myself and my friends. Walt and I were very good buddies, although I melded to the middle in a left-leaning manner. We kept in touch at least once a decade until he passed. I met Wes and Victor via my really crazy (in a kind way) friends and cohorts in the Retina Circus during an extended road trip to the Bay area. Gary pretty much kept to himself living on the Vandermark farm in Duvall. He was a wonderfully talented man, but as with so many, I’ve lost contact. Wes’ poster art was always my favorite. He had the Pac NW native art twisted in his imaginative colorful concepts, so what Seattle boy couldn’t relate. I’m aghast at most of my poster art, but eventually found my niche and became comfortable. Thank you for sharing your thoughts and art during a wonderful time. Peace always — John

  19. Jennifer Fox Says:

    I have about 2 dozen posters from the same company 1975-1979 that are all semi nude women. Any idea on how to get more information on them? Some of the ladies look familiar but I’m unsure where to look or post them at

  20. bob hall Says:

    fantastic collection, iam a stagehand i have worked the paramount, 5th ave theater key arena for 40 years now i have a collection of posters and back stage passes that go back to 1976 broadway and rock posters one of my gems is a set list jonny cash written on june cater cash statinary and it is framed he played the 5th ave theater 1982.i would like to buy rock posters from mid 70’s into the 80’s paramount theater is at the top of my list its been my home away from home now for 40 years thank you sorry about my spelling

  21. Jeff Hammers Says:

    I collected posters for years, always with an eye twards looking for Eagles posters without success. San Fransisco, L.A., Denver, Portland, yes…..Seattle, not much. I was at most of the shows there and don’t remember ever seeing posters available for sale…what a shame.

  22. Howard Says:

    Groovy man – outtasight!

  23. Pete Larson Says:

    I was surprised to see the poster at the top of the page which was actually for the Eagles in Spokane. I was involved as guitarist in Easy Chair (Seattle) and Tender Green was a very talented Spokane group. I wish I had copies of all the posters of concerts we did at Seattle’s Eagles and the San Francisco Sound ballroom plus other festivals including one in Volunteer Park. I think I met Gary Eagle at a later time and was oblivious that he had done many of these posters.

  24. Doug Pratt Says:

    Gary Eagle also did the first three Jr. Cadillac LP covers. Kind of in the style of Robert Crumb, who’s ZAP COMICS (and many other titles) were quite popular at that time. Their first album “Jr. Cadillac is Back”, also had an 8 1/2″ x 11″, 7 panel comic strip insert in the LP that Gary did. Recently, I found a hand bill for a Jr. Cadillac gig at the Brotherhood Tavern (Seattle) that Gary did. It is also in the same style as the LP covers and the insert.
    Google up ‘Gary Eagle Blacksmith’. That’s what he’s been up too for the last 45+ years. IMHO……….a really great, super talented guy.

  25. John Stockton Says:

    Where’ s Jimi?


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