Grateful Dead at the Shrine, 1968

1968 Grateful dead poster for a show at the Shrine in Los Angeles also featuring Blue Cheer. This July 11, 1968 poster is be Rick Griffin and is black and white

Rick Griffin 

 

Grateful Dead at the Shrine, 1968

 

First printing, lithograph, Condition: Near Mint

 

Signed by Rick Griffin

 

Framed: 26 7/8" tall x 20 15/16" wide

 

$$$

 

 

Detail

Close-up of frame at angle

Close-up of Rick Griffin signature

Close-up of frame

Close-up of frame

Description

This piece is yet another classic Rick Griffin design that was so strong visually it thrived in black and white. Some sort of antlered creature wrapped up in the scarves like a 1920s auto racer, hands tight on the wheel, with a background of crossbones and a halo of skulls. Whoa! This represented a departure from many of the Rick Griffin totems that pop up in his other posters from the period.

 

 

Although the concert was July 11, this piece is a commemorative poster that Griffin designed later—some time in the early 70s. These posters were then sold through Griffin’s company, California Graphic Exchange. There is a well-known reprint from the Psychedelic Solution and some pirated copies. The crazy image features an antlered creature driving some sort of vehicle through a porthole (a familiar Griffin motif, see The Flying Eyeball" poster) The driver sports some goggles and a scarf flying behind as if a World War I flyer. It comes from a character Rick created in his 1972 Man From Utopia underground comic book called “Beetle Bones” and so this poster is also known as Bonedriver.

 

 

There is no information on the setlist from this show but it was an active time for the band, which played 131 shows that year. This gig followed the Dead’s final show at the Carousel Ballroom, which they had leased in January along with other San Francisco bands in an attempt to break the hold that Bill Graham had on concert bookings. That 5-month experiment failed and within a month, Graham had obtained a new lease from the owner of the Carousel, shut down his original Fillmore Auditorium and renamed the Carousel the Fillmore West.

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