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stephen ROMANO gallery

BURT SHONBERG

ANNOUNCEMENT !

PRESENTED BY THE PHILOSOPHICAL RESEARCH SOCIETY
AND STEPHEN ROMANO GALLERY


"MOMENTARY BLASTS OF UNEXPECTED LIGHT:
THE VISIONARY ART OF BURT SHONBERG"
On View OCTOBER 24 – DECEMBER 21

The exhibition will feature some never before seen works by the artist  

"Every day, for seven years straight, I was hit by a number of widely-separated, momentary blasts of unexpected light."
— Burt Shonberg, excerpted from
"Out Here: A Brief Account of How This All Began for Me"

 

Burt Shonberg, title and date unknown.

 

Shonberg was one of the premiere psychedelic and esoteric artists in Los Angeles in the 1950s and 1960s. He was a close friend and associate of artist, poet, and actress, Marjorie Cameron. Shonberg also embraced the Fourth Way system of Gurdjieff, and his canvases began to reflect the mystical illumination inspired by his higher states of consciousness. His work was prominently featured in Roger Corman’s Vincent Price-starring horror film The Fall of the House of Usher and on the walls of venues like the long-gone, bohemian Laguna Beach coffeehouse Café Frankenstein. His paintings of mythical creatures in fantastic landscapes have only recently begun to attract the attention they deserve. From the late 1950s until his premature death in 1977, Shonberg was a highly admired artist of his time in Los Angeles. During this period, his eye-popping murals graced the facades and interiors of popular coffeehouses and clubs along the Sunset Strip. His paintings also adorned notable rock album covers by bands like Love and others.

Opening reception will be followed by a conversation in the PRS Auditorium between collector, curator and Shonberg exhibition producer Stephen Romano from his home in Brooklyn, along with acclaimed author and Shonberg biographer Spencer Kansa and film historian & author Justin Humphreys. Stephen Romano Gallery is located in Brooklyn, New York with a collection of esoteric art works championed by gallery owner, Stephen Romano.
Romano is a collector, curator, and private art dealer. He has collaborated with The Buckland Museum of Witchcraft and Magick in Cleveland, Ohio, The American Folk Art Museum, The New York Book and Ephemera Fair, The Pratt Institute, and others. Stephen Romano Gallery continues to curate exhibitions in New York mixing contemporary, folk, historical and ephemeral artwork.

Thursday, October 24

 

Buckland Museum of Witchcraft and Magic

"Beyond the Pleasuredome: The Lost Occult World of Burt Shonberg"

 

Beyond the Pleasuredome: The Lost Occult Works of

Burt Shonberg

Burt Shonberg, title unknown, 1960, casein on panel, 36inw x 30inh .

“As two artists moving into new modes of expression in our work, our introduction was fortuitous. His preoccupation with monsters, aliens, the occult, and other horror elements in his art resonated with me. Most importantly, I could see he was a major talent exploring new ground in form and color. I knew right away that Burt’s artistic sensibilities would lend much to my new film.”

—Roger Corman, director of “The House of Usher” 1960 and “The Premature Burial” 1962 (both of which featured the art of Burt Shonberg)

Burt Shonberg "Edith.. I Should Have Loved You Better" 1958

48 x 48 inches Casein on panel.

 

“Wish I could offer up a decisive comment, but it was such a special time and he was such a unique and special person and what he did was so far out, it deserves more than I have the time to do justice to.”

"..if he could only know this posthumous attention his life and work have attracted, he would smile that knowing smile, close his eyes and nod his head."

Hampton Fancher, screenwriter, "Blade Runner", "Blade Runner 2049"

 

The Buckland Museum of Witchcraft and Magic in Cleveland, Ohio, and Stephen Romano Gallery in Brooklyn, are pleased to present the first exhibition of art by the L.A. visionary BURT SHONBERG (1933-1977) in over 50 years.

The exhibition opens August 17 and HAS BEEN EXTENDED THROUGH THE END OF 2021. The exhibition is produced by Stephen Romano and curated by longtime Shonberg advocate Brian Chidester. It is accompanied by a catalog, the first ever exclusively devoted to Shonberg's art, with essay also by Chidester, an introduction by Minneapolis Institute of Art curator Robert Cozzolino, a director’s foreword by Steven Intermill of the Buckland, and contributions by Shonberg friend Marshall Berle, screenwriter/former Shonberg roommate Hampton Fancher, and esteemed filmmaker Roger Corman.

 

The exhibition catalog pdf available at archive.org

 

"Beyond the Pleasuredome: The Lost Occult World of Burt Shonberg" Virtual Gallery at Kunstmatrix.com

Buckland Museum of Witchcraft and Magick Director Steven Intermill says: “It's a thrill to be able to host Burt Shonberg's first solo exhibit in 54 years in our museum dedicated to the hidden arts. Back in the 1960s our founder Raymond Buckland was on the East Coast exploring the liminal headspace through witchcraft & magick at the same time Shonberg was on the West Coast charting his own maps of the unconscious. Here we are in Ohio, the midwest of the USA, and the two can combine. In these paintings I see an Old World witchiness with a New World exploration. The subjects of Shonberg's paintings walk a line between that ol' time mystery and something new... even five or six decades after their creation."

Born on March 30, 1933, in Revere, MA, Shonberg studied art in the fifties at the Boston School of the Museum of Fine Arts. His interests were in the occult, UFOs, science fiction, and horror movies, in particular, the Frankenstein monster, whom the artist considered something of an alter-ego.

He gained acclaim in L.A. primarily for his mural paintings which adorned popular Los Angeles coffeehouses like Pandora's Box, Cosmo Alley, the Bastille, and the Seven Chefs, and from his associations with filmmakers and actors in the subculture of Hollywood then.

During his lifetime, Shonberg was associated with the artist/occultist Marjorie Cameron, who probably introduced him to the mythos of Aleister Crowley and the ceremonial use of peyote. Shonberg later participated in 1960 in the experiments of Dr. Oscar Janiger on the effects of LSD on the creative mind. Shonberg's art was prominently used in Corman's classic films “The House of Usher” and "The Premature Burial".

The relationship between Shonberg and Cameron—the widow of rocket inventor and Crowley disciple Jack Parsons—perpetuated Shonberg’s interest in the occult and his early exposure to hallucinogenic drugs.

Shonberg, along with friend and television writer George Clayton Johnson, and a third partner, folk singer Doug Myres, opened the Cafe Frankenstein, a beatnik coffee house in Laguna Beach, California in 1958.

CAFE FRANKENSTEIN Laguna Beach California. photograph by Doris I. Walker, May 1961.

Burt Shonberg, title unknown, the Bride of Frankenstein 1958

 

CAFE FRANKENSTEIN Laguna Beach California.

photograph courtesy George Clayton Johnson

 

Shonberg’s art gained the attention of Roger Corman around 1958 when the latter commissioned Shonberg to create ancestral portraits for his high-profile film version of Edgar Allan Poe’s “House of Usher” (1960) starring Vincent Price. Afterwards, Shonberg contributed his artwork to a second film, “Premature Burial” (1962), also based on a story by Edgar Allan Poe.

 

Burt Shonberg, Vincent Price, Daniel Haller on the set of "The House of Usher" circa 1959 - 1960


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Still from Roger Corman's 1960 film "The House of Usher" staring Vincent Price. Painting by Burt Shonberg of the house. The painting's whereabouts are unknown.

Still from Roger Corman's 1960 film "The House of Usher" staring Vincent Price. Painting by Burt Shonberg of the house. The painting's whereabouts are unknown.

By 1960, Shonberg and his partners sold their interest in the Cafe Frankenstein to the local Laguna couple Michael Schley and Connie Vining, who kept it going until 1962. Upon the sale of the cafe, Burt Shonberg paid off his remaining debt to George Clayton Johnson by gifting him a group of paintings, which comprise the bulk of works in this exhibition. This important group of works was acquired through the Stephen Romano Gallery in 2021 from Johnson's descendants and is being exhibited at the Buckland Museum of Witchcraft and Magick for the very first time.

"Burt Shonberg was more than just an artist, he was a “prospector of consciousness” who traveled to areas outside of our collective awareness and painted what he saw during those excursions.

~ Marshall Berle former manager of Sprit, Van Halen and friend to Burt Shonberg, and producer of "Out Here" a "Film About Burt Shonberg "LSD" artist." see trailer here

Burt Shonberg, Randy California of Spirit and Marshall Berle in the 1970's

The collection of works that comprise this exhibition straddle the time when Shonberg was first introduced to psychedelics and the occult and culminates in the centerpiece of the exhibition, “Untitled (Lucifer), produced in 1961 when Shonberg was perhaps deepest into his practice and usage.

Shonberg also illustrated sci-fi pulp magazines in the early sixties and he designed album covers for the bands like the Curtis Brothers, Love, and Spirit, the latter of whom the artist befriended via his supporter Marshall Berle. Berle was managing Spirit and its main songwriter Randy California at the time.

Burt Shonberg, title unknown, (side A), circa 1958 - 1961, casein on panel, 24inw x 30inh


"..Shonberg was too strange for even the '60s California sci-fi world, and too far removed from the fine art establishment, to be embraced by either. Even today, when radical viewpoints are commonplace in the art world, Shonberg has yet to receive recognition. Meanwhile, a unique body of work remains hidden in plain sight."

- Brian Chidester "In Search of Burt Shonberg's Lost 1960s Psychedelic Art" LAweekly .. October 26, 2015.

“Beyond the Pleasuredome: The Lost Occult World of Burt Shonberg” marks the fifth project in which the Buckland Museum and Stephen Romano Gallery have collaborated on together. Previous exhibitions include: “William Mortensen's WITCHES”; the first-ever North American exhibition by Barry William Hale, “Apparitions”; and most recently, “Transmutations: Witches, Healers, and Oracles.”

"As for Shonberg (who died in 1977, aged 44), his life story was a heady fusion of ‘magical inspiration, psychedelic experience and artistic production’, all the while ‘walking the thin and dangerous between dimensions.. His artwork was all about beckoning us onward into the realm of our dreams".

-- Peter Fuller, excerpted from "Burt Shonberg | The psychedelic 1960s artist behind those haunting House of Usher portraits" at Vincent Price Legacy UK.

For further information and visuals please contact Stephen Romano at romanostephen@gmail.com

 

BURT SHONBERG TIMELINE

BURT SHONBERG'S ART IN THE FILMS OF ROGER CORMAN

EXHIBITION DOCUMENTATION

GEORGE CLAYTON JOHNSON

MARSHALL BERLE

THE DESERT SUN JUNE 24 1959

EXHIBITION PRESS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Burt Shonberg, title unknown, 1961, casein on panel, 25 1/2inw x 12inh

 

 

Burt Shonberg, title unknown, circa 1965, casein on panel, 8inw x 14inh

 

The Modern Folk Quartet, Warner Bros. 1963

Love "Out Here" Blue Thumb Records 1969

 

Spirit "Spirit of 76" - 1975 Mercury Records. back cover reads “outer limits mystery Tampa Florida 1975 AD The outer limits mystery sphere. Rulers chiefs of Space Action Agencies of Ancient Ancient Ages, reappear in this century back from the dead. An event unexpected will appear by surprise that will initiate an all new enter era action of inner cosmic intrigue”

 

Burt Shonberg title unknown, date unknown circa 1958 - 1961, casein on panel, 32 x 50 Burt Shonberg portraying his partner Majorie Cameron as a sphinx.

 

 

Burt Shonberg (left) and folk singer Doug Myres, at the Cafe Frankenstein in Laguna Beach California circa 1958 - 1962

photograph courtesy George Clayton Johnson

 

Burt Shonberg "Magic Landscape" (Lucifer In The Garden), 1961, casein on panel, 49 1/2 x 37 1/2 inches

 

Burt Shonberg title unknown ink on paper 1957

 

Burt Shonberg title unknown "My Friend George" 1959

 

please inquire to romanostephen@gmail.com

for availabe works.