“Strobe Light’s Beams
Creates Dreams”-The Summer Of Love, 1967-The Boston Museum Of Fine Arts Take
By Political Commentator
Frank Jackman
Early this year driven
by my old corner boys, Alex James and Sam Lowell, I had begun to write some
pieces in this space about things that happened in a key 1960s year, 1967. The
genesis of this work is based on of all things a business trip that Alex took to
San Francisco earlier this spring. While there he noted on one of the
ubiquitous mass transit buses that crisscross the city an advertisement for an
exhibition at the de Young Art Museum located in Golden Gate Park. That
exhibition The Summer of Love, 1967 had him cutting short a
meeting one afternoon in order to see what it was all about. What it was all
about aside the nostalgia effect for members of the now ragtag Generation of
‘68 was an entire floor’s worth of concert poster art, hippy fashion, music and
photographs of that noteworthy year in the lives of some of those who came of
age in the turbulent 1960s. The reason for Alex playing hooky was that he had
actually been out there that year and had imbibed deeply of the counter-culture
for a couple of years out there after that.
Alex had not been the
only one who had been smitten by the Summer of Love bug because when he
returned to Riverdale outside of Boston where he now lives he gathered up all
of the corner boys from growing up North Adamsville still standing to talk
about, and do something about, commemorating the event. His first contact was
with Sam Lowell the old film critic who also happened to have gone out there
and spent I think about a year there, maybe a little more. As had most of the old
corner boys for various lengths of time usually a few months. Except me. Alex’s
idea when he gathered all of us together was to put together a small
commemoration book in honor of the late Peter Paul Markin. See Markin, always
known as “Scribe” after he was dubbed that by our leader Frankie Riley, was the
first guy to go out there when he sensed that the winds of change he kept
yakking about around the corner on desolate Friday and Saturday nights when we
had no dough, no girls, no cars and no chance of getting any of those quickly
were coming west to east.
Once everybody agreed to
do the book Alex contacted his youngest brother Zack, the fairly well known
writer, to edit and organize the project. I had agreed to help as well. The
reason I had refused to go to San Francisco had been that I was in the throes
of trying to put together a career as a political operative by attempting to
get Robert Kennedy to run against that naked sneak thief of a sitting
President, Lyndon Baines Johnson, who had us neck deep in the big muddy of
Vietnam and had no truck with hippies, druggies or “music is the revolution”
types like those who filled the desperate streets around Haight-Ashbury.
Then. Zack did a very good job and we are proud of tribute to the
not forgotten still lamented late Scribe who really was a mad man character and
maybe if he had not got caught up in the Army, in being drafted, in being sent
to Vietnam which threw him off kilter when he got back he might still be around
to tell us what the next big trend will
be.
The corner boys from the
old Acre neighborhood in North Adamsville are, as the article below
demonstrates, not the only ones who are thinking about the 50th anniversary
of the Summer of Love. Not only did the de Young cash in on the celebration which
is to be expected since it is right in San Francisco and right in Golden Gate
Park where the Be-Ins, and many concerts by Jefferson Airplane, The Grateful
Dead, Janis Joplin and Big Brother and the Holding Company, the Doors, etc.
played (many times for free if you can believe that in the now age of high
priced tickets for the Stones, etc.) but the Museum of Fine Arts in staid old Boston
has tipped its hat as well. The exhibit in Boston unlike San Francisco is small
and concentrates on the graphic poster art and photographs but is similar in
intent to the larger exhibits (also one at the Berkeley Art Museum around the
same time as the de Young). Boston had its own smaller Summer of Love experience
as well in 1967 but it was a pale refection of the big deal in Frisco town
Still no question as I
have mentioned before around this celebration year 50 years later looking at
the art, the posters, photographs and listening to the music makes me once
again realize that in that time “to be young was very
heaven.”
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