Legendary artist Alton Kelley created a graphic style that rocked the world beginning in the psychedelic Sixties. His concert posters, logo designs, LP album covers, and fine art have forevermore defined that time. Kelley, born June 17, 1940, passed away peacefully at home June 1st of complications from a long illness.
He is survived by the true love of his life, Marguerite Trousdale Kelley. He also leaves his mother Annie, sister Kathy, and beloved children Patty, Yossarian, and China, and beautiful grandchildren Life and Lacoda.
Through his mind-expanding creativity and over several decades, Kelley gave rock music new colors, shapes, and themes expressing the optimism and enthusiasm of young people around the globe. His graphics defined youth culture as much as the music itself-in effect his art was a break-through collaboration with musicians and bands such as the Grateful Dead, Jerry Garcia, Janis Joplin, and Jimi Hendrix. As Joel Selvin, rock critic for the San Francisco Chronicle, put it, “Kelley and Mouse drew the first face on rock music.”
Kelley and his life-long collaborator Stanley Mouse are best known for their posters for “San Francisco style” dance-concerts at the Fillmore Auditorium, Winterland Arena, the Fillmore West, the Avalon Ballroom, and a host of other Bay Area theaters and amphitheaters. They also created world-renowned posters and album covers for the Grateful Dead, Journey, Steve Miller, Jimi Hendrix, The Beatles, and others.
The two artists historically worked as a team, in their words “riffing off each other's giggle.” They joyfully appropriated from historic sources, in one instance re-working an obscure nineteenth-century etching to create their iconic Grateful Dead “skeleton and roses” design. They combined vibrant Sixties color with French poster-making joi de vivre enthusiasm, and their own adapted technique, to generate compelling pieces often issued on a weekly basis, ultimately dazzling millions worldwide. Thus, they changed advertising art forever, as their posters were key examples of what became one of the most important art movements of the latter part of the twentieth century.
When Kelley (a native of Maine) met Mouse (a native of Detroit, MI) in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district in late 1965 (the “Haight” was the epicenter of the hippie movement, culminating in the “Summer of Love” in 1967), they instantly recognized they were kindred spirits in what Mouse describes as “one of the juciest scenes of all time.” Their concert posters, commissioned by Fillmore promoter Bill Graham and the Avalon's Family Dog collective, were eagerly snapped up by bands and fans alike.
In the decades since, Mouse and Kelley's classics have established even greater popularity, rivaling the interest long shown by collectors of French turn-of-the-century Belle Epoque art made famous by Toulouse-Lautrec and others.
In his later years, Kelley joyfully turned to illustrating hot rods and custom cars, fine art paintings, and designs for t-shirts and other merchandise.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made at the Washington Mutual Western Street branch in Petaluma, CA for a memorial bench in a Sonoma County Park. A memorial event will be announced shortly.
For members of the press: photographs, selected artwork, and video bites are available by contacting Jennifer Gross at 323-658-8700.
Comments
so sorry to hear this...
Thanks for the awesome art, Kelley. Shine on...
very saddened
thinking of all your artwork i've enjoyed though the years,thx Kelly...i'll be watching the sky for more
may the four wind blow you safely home.....
thank you Kelley
For all those awesome images that have become the archetypical representations of our scene. You blew my mind and gave me smiles and laughs. Peace.
If the doors of perception were cleansed, everything would appear to man as it is, infinite.
William Blake
Skull and Roses
The iconic Skull and Roses appeared in the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, rendered in the English verse by Edmund Fitzgerald with drawings by Edmund J. Sullivan. One edition was published by Hartsdale House, New York, copyright 1932. An almost identical copy was published by Illustrated Editions Company, 120 Fourth Avenue, (New York).
Our Skull and Roses, brought to us by Edmund and Alton is opposite verse XXVI, which I quote from:
Oh, come with old Khayyam, and the leave the Wise
To talk; one thing is certain, that Life flies;
One thing is certain, and the Rest is Lies;
The Flower that once has blown for ever dies.
We've lost so many and so much, as a community and as individuals, a Dead Concert is always a bittersweet time. I had tears in my eyes when Phil played Box of Rain, and Bobby played Brokedown Palace at Mizner Park.
Same day, same poster
Man, Bo Diddley and Alton Kelley on the same day. Music and the world at large has truly lost two pioneers. Here's a nice Bo Diddley poster, created by Alton Kelley:
Thank You Kelley, You were (still are) a Heavy Hitter
Your work still inspires me in my own creations. You and Mouse and Rick Griffin were (are) a class all to your own. True originals. Thanks for the wonderful thought provoking and inspiring creations that only say "Kelley" in their originality. You kept a low profile, but were highly visible.
Kelley, there is only one.
~Tom ( The AllTomMitt Drawing Machine) yeah, i know, cheesy.....but it works!
So sad to hear this. He was
So sad to hear this. He was a magnificent artist. Creating a style all his own and pushing the boundries of graphic art at the time. Leaving behind a legacy that is sure to only grow over time. We will miss you.
pk
He will be missed
Rarely have art and music combined so well as did SF rock and the seminal Kelley/Mouse images. The posters deepened my understanding of the music and vice versa. Best of all, there was always a palpable joy to Kelley's artwork that still makes me smile. The world is indeed diminished by his loss.
Noyatin
the images pulled me in
...and made my eyes dance. Thank you, AK, for the art and the smiles. Your drawings will live on. Peace to your family and close friends.
Thanks Alton Kelley
Your art work is entwined in my mind with the music of an entire era, especially The Grateful Dead. For those of us left behind, this is a sad day, but I have a vision of you in a place that finally surpasses the incredible inspiration of your psychedelic visions (not that you didn't also experience that bliss, in this world, as well).
Also, that was a great post, cactuswax... awesome poster for Bo Diddley! How ironic and sad a day, indeed.
"You know what the trouble about real life is? There's no danger music."