1967 Pictoral Map of San Francisco Epitomizing the Summer of Love

SanFrancisco-schiller-1967-2
$1,500.00
San Francisco. - Main View
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1967 Pictoral Map of San Francisco Epitomizing the Summer of Love

SanFrancisco-schiller-1967-2

San Francisco in the Summer of Love, Man.
$1,500.00

Title


San Francisco.
  1967 (dated)     36.5 x 28 in (92.71 x 71.12 cm)

Description


A striking and thoroughly far-out 1967 pictorial map of San Francisco. This engaging view, screen-printed in red, black, and metallic gold, captures the city during the Summer of Love, with particular reference to the music that epitomized that iconic year.
A Closer Look
The print was executed in three colors - red, gold, and black. The city's hilly topography is ludicrously exaggerated, presenting a rambunctious pile of iconic references and insider's jokes springing up from the foot of the Golden Gate Bridge, topped with a 'Love' Banner. The image is richly informed with an insider's knowledge of the scene, providing the viewer with a wealth of detail. Sausalito, in the foreground, features hillside meadows and a 'Hippy Summer Camp.' The bucolic scene ends abruptly with a teeming crowd of pedestrians and buses filling the Golden Gate Bridge (though it is not clear whether this horde is entering or leaving.)
Sparta Graphics
The printer of the view, Sparta Graphics, produced many excellent posters on behalf of music promoter Bill Graham and some of the most iconic bands and venues of the era; references to these abound. The Grateful Dead, Family Dog, Big Brother and the Holding Company, Moby Grape, Quicksilver Messenger Service, and Jefferson Airplane are represented (the lattermost by a ramshackle aircraft, reprised from Schiller and Michaelson's June 4, 1966 Jefferson Airplane show poster, scattering flowers.) The Fillmore Auditorium, Avalon Ballroom, and The Matrix appear, as does the extremely short-lived Western Front. Personal nods to their ('Bill Graham is a good guy,' 'We love Chet Helms,') show appear postered on buildings walls. The local radio station (KFRC, The Big 610!) gets a shout-out as well. 'Love' and 'Peace' banners on the bridge and surmounting the city and the Hippy Summer Camp are at sharp odds with the 'Hate' flag waving above Alcatraz.
1967: The Summer of Love and Haight-Ashbury
Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco, was the nexus of American hippy culture in the late 60s. According to a definition found on another map of the period,
… a 'hippie' is a member of the 'Now' culture [and] believes in individuality, in immediacy, and in togetherness and love, but most of all in the senses.
Also called Flower Children, hippies were suspicious of the government, rejected consumerist values, and opposed war. The hippie movement reached its peak in the summer of 1967, called the Summer of Love, when over 100,000 people congregated in San Francisco around the intersection of Haight Street and Ashbury. The small neighborhood could not handle the massive influx. Overcrowding, hunger, drug problems, homelessness, and crime rose precipitously. By the fall of 1867, hippies began to filter out of the neighborhood. Those that remained even held a mock funeral declaring 'The Death of the Hippie.'
Publication History and Census
This poster was drawn by Jim Michaelson and printed by Dave Schiller of Sparta Graphics in 1967. We aware of examples in private collections, but see only a single example in OCLC, at the Osher Library.

CartographerS


David Schiller (c. 1945 - ????) was a San José, California music promoter and printer whose printing venture with artist Jim Michaelson, Sparta Graphics, produced posters and album covers for many bands and venues of the San Francisco scene between 1966 and 1968. More by this mapmaker...


Jim Michaelson (c. 1945 - May 28, 2019) was a California artist and illustrator who, having made his name with Sparta Graphic’s iconic posters, went on to a long career as a poster maker for Disney Parks. Learn More...

Condition


Very good. Seven neat pinholes in corners and top center.

References


OCLC 1190905029. Rumsey 11446.000.