A Retrospective of works by JOHN VAN HAMERSVELD
- Posted by Ryan U -
Opening Reception:
This Friday, March 6th, 8-11pm
SUBLIMINAL PROJECTS
1331 W Sunset Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90026
www.subliminalprojects.com
Highlights from below: Best known for his legendary poster for the 1964 blockbuster surf ?lm The Endless Summer and his album covers for the Beatles (Magical Mystery Tour), The Rolling Stones (Exile on Main Street), Jefferson Airplane (Crown of Creation), the Grateful Dead (Skeletons in the Closet), Kiss (Hotter Than Hell) and Blondie (Eat to the Beat).
Wow.
More info from Swindle magazine: http://swindlemagazine.com/issue05/john-van-hamersveld/
FYI: Subliminal Projects is Shepard Fairey’s gallery in the same building as his office’s for Studio Number One, his design studio. He is usually there himself to DJ the opening party. If you don’t know who that is, look him up.

Like an acid trip in ink on the paper of space and time, John Van Hamersveld?s graphics have transcended the psychedelic ?60s and become classic images that are as futuristic as they are vintage. “Post-Future,” opening March 6th at Subliminal Projects, features many of Van Hamersveld?s classic works juxtaposed with re-imaginings of those images, recent retro- styled pieces and a never-before-seen series of drawings connecting past and present. Through the show, Van Hamersveld creates a lens through which the past can be seen and the future can be sourced, where imagery melts into a pool that is both the source and the destination of creativity.
Best known for his legendary poster for the 1964 blockbuster surf ?lm The Endless Summer and his album covers for the Beatles (Magical Mystery Tour), The Rolling Stones (Exile on Main Street), Jefferson Airplane (Crown of Creation), the Grateful Dead (Skeletons in the Closet), Kiss (Hotter Than Hell) and Blondie (Eat to the Beat), among others, as well as the mind-bending concert posters he created while operating the Pinnacle concert production company, Van Hamersveld has built up a wide-ranging body of work over a career verging on its sixth decade. He has been at various times artist, illustrator and designer. Among his other creations: an of?cial poster and 360-foot-long mural for the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games; illustrations for Esquire, Rolling Stone, Billboard; and branding and logos for Fatburger, Contempo Casuals and Broadway Deli. The iconography of his oeuvre runs deep, from Day-Glo tones to trippy swirls to the grinning “Johnny face,” an icon in itself. Van Hamersveld?s retro-contempo-future-spective book, also titled Post-Future (Santa Monica Press), is scheduled for release in September.



