Alton Kelley
- 67 years old
- Male
- Born Jun 17, 1940
- Died Jun 01, 2008
- California United States
About
Psychedelic Artist to be Remembered
Alton Kelley, a San Francisco graphic artist whose psychedelic posters and album covers captured the mood and music of the Grateful Dead, the Steve Miller Band, Journey and other top rock 'n' roll groups of the '60s and '70s, has died. He was 67.
Kelley died Sunday at his home in Petaluma, Calif., according to publicist Jennifer Gross. The cause was complications from osteoporosis.
"Kelley was one of the first to see it coming, the rise of the psychedelic era in San Francisco," Paul Grushkin, who wrote "The Art of Rock, Posters From Presley to Punk" (1987), said this week. "He was a pioneer."
Using images inspired by vintage prints and lettering that flows like smoke, Kelley and Mouse designed graphics now considered emblems of the psychedelic age.
The best known of them all is a skull and roses design they created for the Grateful Dead.
"Kelley had the unique ability to translate the music being played into amazing images that capture the spirit of who we were and what the music was all about," Mickey Hart of the Grateful Dead said in a statement this week.
The album covers that came out of the Kelley-Mouse collaboration with the Grateful Dead included "Workingman's Dead" and "American Beauty" in 1970.
The idea for a skull and roses came from an illustration in "The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam," a collection of poems by the Persian poet who died in 1123. Kelley once explained that he found the illustration in a library book, enlarged the image, and added color and other details that dramatically changed it. "I knew right away it was a classic, " he said in a 1995 interview with the Palm Beach Post.
He and Mouse created several other graphic images that became signatures for certain bands. Among them is a Pegasus that looms from the album cover of the Steve Miller Band's "Book of Dreams" in 1977 and a scarab on the album cover of "Departure," by Journey in 1980.
"Images Kelley and Mouse put on playbills, posters and album covers became a major part of the music experience of the time," Dell Furano of Signatures Network, which merchandises rock artworks, said in an interview this week.
Kelley was born June 17, 1940, in Houlton, Maine. After high school he worked as a mechanic and took art classes but never graduated from art school. He moved to San Francisco in about 1965 and helped found the Family Dog Collective, a group that produced some of the first psychedelic dance concerts in San Francisco, with light shows, dancing and poster art as part of the program.
He met Mouse about a year after he arrived in San Francisco. At the time, the Haight-Ashbury district was starting to bubble over. "It was really fun. Everybody was really enjoying themselves," Kelley told the San Francisco Chronicle last year. "We all came out of the rock 'n' roll world."
When they began working together, "Stanley and I had no idea what we were doing," Kelley told the Chronicle. "We had free rein to just go graphically crazy."
Their posters combined images borrowed from Native American and Chinese art, Art Nouveau and Art Deco, reworked in acid colors and swirling letters that were a dramatic break with tradition. "Before that, all advertising was pretty much just typeset with a photograph of something," Kelley told the Chronicle.
"It was a glory period for record album covers," Grushkin said of the artists' inventions. "Kelley and Mouse created art that captured what the music sounded like."
Kelley continued working as a graphic artist throughout his career, sometimes teaming up with Mouse. Their most recent project was for the March induction ceremony of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland.
Kelley is survived by his wife, Marguerite; three children; two grandchildren; his mother, Annie; and his sister, Kathy.
My Memory
kathy Oct 24, 2008
To be remembered
Don Aters Jun 04, 2008
In reference to Alton, everyone has or had a favorite poster artist. Some like the work of Wilson, although Bill graham couldn't read it and despised the concept and Chet Helms loved it predicated on his friendship with Wes and the ability of a known printer to acquire the paper needed to produce posters in mass for the Avalon Ballroom.
Of the "Big Five", all have some great work recognized universally but in terms of a body of work, Mouse/Kelley poster art will live on for perpetuity, i.e., The Grateful Dead, Journey, etc.
I didn't know Alton as well as Chet or Mouse but we spoke at length during the benefit for Chet in 05.
Young by today's standards, his untimely passing is a sad day for the baby-boomers on this planet and leaves a void that cannot be filled. It isn't just the art that will be missed, it's the candor, humor and contributions to society that will endure. The posters are a given but when all is said and done, his impact will forever be etched in the memoris of those who strolled the hallowed grounds in San francisco when the artists were as integral as the band and subsequent music. He now lives vicariously through all of us and as long as there is one left, he and his work live on, and as it should be.
Rock In Peace Alton kelley...and don't forget to move your feet.
Don Aters
donaters1@yahoo.com
812-987-7495
Your art Work Sucked Compard to others
jack mehoffer Jun 04, 2008
My Memory
david Jun 04, 2008
the first time i i saw him was the day i was a the williams north hollywood home and they got a phone call that anton and stanley mouse had a car accident after they went to sell a record art to a studio. i went to pick them up from the location of the accident and took them to the williams house.
they at that time had rock posters with them and i took home 12 of them ...a lucky day for me and several of my friends i still have them to this day...david .