This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page . (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Dennis King | |
---|---|
Born | Dennis Michael King September 24, 1952 Oakland, California |
Occupation | Author, Archivist, Art Director, Curator, Producer, Entrepreneur |
Nationality | American (United States) |
Years active | 1971–present |
Website | |
www rockpostercollector |
Dennis Michael King (born September 24, 1952) is an American author of books on rock music posters, related memorabilia, and sports cards. [1] He contributed to The Art of Rock by Paul Grushkin, a 1987 book on rock posters of the 1960s and 1970. [2]
King began collecting rock posters and other memorabilia as a teenager in the early 1960's and started selling them in 1971 at a flea market in Alameda, California and other outlets. After funding his education by dealing in collectible sports cards, comic books, poster art, and related ephemera, he graduated from UC Berkeley with a degree in Mathematics. After completing a brief period of high school teaching, he decided to pursue a full-time career in collectible memorabilia. He opened his first dedicated brick and mortar retail storefront, King's Baseball Cards and Comic Books, in the Durant Mall in the Telegraph Avenue area of Berkeley, California. [3] In 1982, he relocated the store to Centre Street in downtown Berkeley, where he expanded his offerings and became one of the first retailers to offer authentic MLB team wear to the public.
He opened the D. King Gallery in Berkeley, California in 1996, initially focusing on art exhibitions. However, he eventually shifted the gallery's focus to 1960s rock posters and vintage sports memorabilia. King has also maintained an online store since 1997, and he owns the adjunct King's Comics, which sells vintage comic books and related merchandise.
Following, The Art of Rock, Grushkin and King co-authored The Art of Modern Rock: The Poster Explosion in 2004, on which King was the Art Director. The Poster Explosion features a collection of over 1,800 posters, which examines the resurgence and expansion of the art form's popularity, style, and influence. [4] The book also included a discussion of the history of silk-screening and its commercial applications following its industrialization, with the work of artists like Frank Kozik, Uncle Charlie, Art Chantry, and Yee Haw Industries. [5] [6] The book was published in French as L’Art du Rock in 2005. King was the sole author of a pair of follow-up books, Art of Rock Mini #1: A-Z (2007), and Art of Rock Mini #2: Poster Girls (2008), which were published in smaller formats. He also contributed to The Hammer of God: The Art of Malleus Rock Art Lab, a book dedicated to the Italian poster art collective.
King has also penned articles for Juxtapoz , [7] where he interviewed poster artist Derek Hess. In 1991, he founded and published Japanese Baseball Card Quarterly and published The Rock Poster Collector in 1998. [8]
King was the curator of the "Art of Modern Rock: The Poster Explosion" exhibit, which was shown at the Bumbershoot Multi-Disciplinary Arts Festival [9] in Seattle and then at the Experience Music Project museum in Seattle in May 2006. [10] The exhibit featured the work of more than 300 artists from King's personal collection. King's images were featured in the Art of Modern Rock wall calendars in 2008 and 2009.
King was a founding member of the Sports Collectibles Association International, which advocated for ethical practices in the sports collectibles industry. King is also a member of the Ephemera Society of America.
The hobby of collecting includes seeking, locating, acquiring, organizing, cataloging, displaying, storing, and maintaining items that are of interest to an individual collector. Collections differ in a wide variety of respects, most obviously in the nature and scope of the objects contained, but also in purpose, presentation, and so forth. The range of possible subjects for a collection is practically unlimited, and collectors have realised a vast number of these possibilities in practice, although some are much more popular than others.
Ephemera are items which were not originally designed to be retained or preserved, but have been collected or retained. The word is etymologically derived from the Greek ephēmeros ‘lasting only a day’. The word is both plural and singular.
Non-sport trading cards are a particular kind of collectible card designated as such because trading cards have historically prominently featured athletes from the world of sports as subjects. Non-sports cards are trading cards whose subjects can be virtually anything other than sports-themed.
Dillon Naylor is an Australian cartoonist, illustrator and toy designer. He is the creator of the comic strip Batrisha the Vampire Girl, which appeared for six years in the children's magazine K-Zone and was the basis for two children's books. Other comic strips include Rock 'n' Roll Fairies which appeared in the children's magazine Total Girl, and Camilla and Mike which appears in the educational magazine Challenge.
Jay Ryan is an American poster designer, and rock musician. He is noted for his squirrel posters, as well as being a bassist in the band Dianogah. He works in Skokie, Illinois.
Geppi's Entertainment Museum was a 16,000-square-foot (1,500 m2) privately owned pop culture museum located at historic Camden Station at Camden Yards in Baltimore, Maryland. The museum chronicled the history of pop culture in America from the 17th century to the early 21st century, as made popular in newspapers, magazines, comic books, movies, television, radio and video games. It featured a collection of nearly 60,000 pop culture artifacts, including magazines, movie posters, toys, buttons, badges, cereal boxes, trading cards, dolls, figurines, and other memorabilia.
Emek Golan is an American designer, illustrator, and fine art painter. He was called "The Thinking Man’s Poster Artist" by punk-rock singer Henry Rollins while working on the album cover for A Rollins in the Wry.
Jefferson R. Burdick (1900–1963) was an American electrician and a collector of printed ephemera, including postcards, posters, cigar bands, and other types of printed materials dating from the mid-nineteenth century to the early 1960s. He is best known for collecting trading and baseball cards in The American Card Catalog, otherwise known as the ACC.
Guy Burwell is an illustrator and designer based in Portland, Oregon. He is primarily known for making limited edition rock concert posters. Despite the fact that rock posters are a predominantly American art form, Burwell's work is also highly appreciated and collected in Europe.
Richard Shubb is best known as the inventor of the Shubb Capo, a very popular guitar and banjo accessory. His 1978 patent is cited by Sterner's Capo Museum as being one of the most significant improvements in the development of the capo. He also invented the lever-operated banjo fifth string capo, the compensated banjo bridge, and holds several other U.S. and international patents on musical instrument accessories and improvements.
Casey Burns is an American-born graphic illustrator, screen printer, rock poster artist, musician, and advertising art director. He was a founding member of The Nein, a member of LD Beghtol's LD&CO and was at one time a member of The Rosebuds.
Marco Almera is a Southern California artist.
Jim Evans, sometimes known as TAZ, is an American painter, printmaker, and creative director who was a contributing figure in the visual art movement known as underground comix. After success as an illustrator of Underground Comix, Evans became known for his Album Cover and Film Poster art and hundreds of Rock Music posters, in addition to being owner of the Digital Marketing group, Division 13.
Joe Simko is a New York City based illustrator who has contributed to Topps’ Garbage Pail Kids and Wacky Packages trading cards. He is the producer and co-director of the Garbage Pail Kids documentary film, 30 Years of Garbage. He is the illustrator/author of the book series, The Sweet Rot, and has designed artwork for bands, creating album covers, tour posters and concert shirts for such acts as Metallica, Gwar, Misfits, The Vans Warped Tour, etc. His project Cereal Killers Trading Cards, 1st Series was released May 2, 2011. The Cereal Killers cards spoof breakfast cereals with popular horror films. Joe wrote and painted all 55 cards for the first and second set and launched the series through his company, Wax Eye. 2nd Series was released through Wax Eye in June 2012.
Robert Lee Beerbohm was an American comic book historian and retailer who was intimately involved with the rise of comics fandom from 1966. Beginning as a teenager in the late 60s, he became a fixture in the growing comic convention scene, while in the 1970s and 1980s he was heavily involved in Bay Area comic book retailing and distribution.
David King was a British graphic designer, design historian, and writer, who assembled one of the largest collections of Soviet graphics and photographs. From this collection, he created a series of books covering the history of the Russian Revolution and its associated art and propaganda. In addition to Soviet-era photographs, posters, and other materials, his collection included items related to the Spanish Civil War, Maoist China, the Weimar Republic, and American labour organizations. King, a "leftist with Trotskyist leanings", in particular collected photographs and ephemera related to Leon Trotsky, who was extensively doctored out of revolutionary photographs and records under Josef Stalin's regime.
Glen Trosch is an American businessman considered an expert in the field of popular culture collectibles and memorabilia. His primary areas of expertise are toys of the 1960s and 1970s, underground comix and vintage rock concert posters. Trosch is the owner of Psychedelic Art Exchange, the world's leading dealer in museum quality vintage 1960s concert posters.
Scrojo is an American poster artist, illustrator and graphic designer. He is particularly known for his prolific work in the music industry and the surf and skate community. He has illustrated over 2,000 posters to date for concerts and other music events. Many of these have been for the Belly Up Aspen in Aspen, Colorado, as well as the Belly Up Tavern in Solana Beach, California, where he has been the resident artist for 30 years. Scrojo has also regularly worked for such notable venues as The Fillmore, The Casbah, Alamo Drafthouse (Austin), The Troubadour and House of Blues.
Jacaeber Kastor is a writer, artist, gallery-owner and curator of psychedelic art. He is former owner of the successful Psychedelic Solution gallery in New York’s West Village.