Beverly Glen / chapter 5
Midcentury America is very much my childhood era, but the style of that era had little to do with either my life or my parents’. Early in their marriage, before I was born, Wallace worked in a furniture restoration factory, where he went out of his way to damage perfectly beautiful tables by whipping them, to give them that old, slightly damaged appearance. Wallace made our household furniture, which was quite simple, practical, and I think beautiful. As far as I know he never took another job anywhere. During my lifetime I know he was offered a job at UCLA, but he turned it down because the job was to teach a master’s class in photography and he was afraid someone would ask him how to put the film in a camera. My mother used to load his camera for him. Wallace also hinted to me in a very hush-hush tone that he had a second job as a bartender in Topanga Canyon, but I never believed him. I can’t imagine him taking orders for beer or wine. It wasn’t in his character. On top of that, I rarely saw him leave the house for more than a couple of hours. My understanding is that he didn’t have a “feel” for work. He wasn’t against it, nor was he for it. It just didn’t exist in his world.
Shirley had to cope with bringing in the weekly paycheck by working at various jobs: as a model for illustrated ads for Bullocks Department Store, the sessions for which took place in the beautiful art deco building on Wilshire in the Miracle Mile district, and as a shop girl at various boutiques in Beverly Hills. My mom pretty much had to bring the bacon home, as well as take care of the dishes and cooking. I remember being excited when she came back from work. Even as a baby, I missed her feminine touch in the household. Also, at a very young age, I was aware of the quality of the food when she was around.
WALLACE BERMAN / Diane di Prima, Shirley Berman (R) & Tosh Berman (L), 1962
Whenever we had guests, which was all the time in those years in Beverly Glen, she would have to serve the drinks and snacks, and make everyone feel comfortable. In the earliest years of my life, I have no memory of my parents being apart, except during my mom’s nine-to-five work schedule. Even with her salary, which wasn’t enough for a family of three, my dad had to kick in some dough. I knew he would play cards for food money. He had an innate ability to raise funds out of nowhere when the curtain was about to drop. But throughout my life, except during our time in San Francisco, my parents always owned the homes that they lived in, though strangely enough they never purchased one. Yet my parents owned both of our houses in the Los Angeles area outright, or rather, my mom did. While Wallace craved anonymity, I think for him owning a home was the only way to move forward or have some financial control over his life and the family.
WALLACE BERMAN / Tosh Berman with Alice from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, 1963, Beverly Glen
Almost immediately after my parents moved in, the Beverly Glen house became Ground Zero for the L.A. boho lifestyle. To me, at my age, it wasn’t exceptional, but I now realize how extraordinary were those who came to visit my parents at this address. The entranceway was a dirt path with poison oak on the side of the hill. I have an active memory of falling into the poison oak and suffering greatly for a night or two. I can still feel the sticky paste of the medicinal cream all over my chest, arms, and legs. The worst part of it was being told by my mom not to touch or scratch my body. Apparently, I learned a form of Zen early on. If one could avoid the oak, which took some skill because it reached far into the pathway, then one would reach the front entrance of the house, which went directly into the kitchen. That room was small but long. Next to the kitchen table was a life-size cardboard cutout of Alice from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865), as illustrated by John Tenniel.
WALLACE BERMAN / 1548 Crater Lane, Beverly Glen, 1956
The front room was a combination of my dad’s studio, our living room, and my parents’ bedroom. There were no chairs in this room, just a floor-level table made by Wallace where we ate our meals. We had to sit on the floor or the bed, which became a couch during the daytime. The left side of the room was the studio, and my dad had a sturdy workbench that was attached to the wall. We also had a turntable with one large speaker. Records and their sleeves were stacked by the speaker or by the wall underneath the table. My dad had a stool, and that was it.
I had a private room for myself, your basic bedroom, but the bathroom was attached, so anyone who wished to use the single toilet had to go through my room. Also, across from the bathtub, there was a window facing the front entrance that led into the kitchen. If I took a bath at certain times, I might come across a visitor; the window had no curtains. To this day, I keep a very private inner life because I was accustomed to having my living space invaded by others. Living in small quarters with adults, one needs to make up a world that is suitable and invisible.
The house was on stilts facing Beverly Glen Boulevard. I had the feeling of floating above the land. I have no memory of this, but Diane di Prima claimed in her memoir Recollections of My Life as a Woman (2001) that she saw my father remove all of the furniture from the living room and put it outside in the yard. He then drilled a hole in the floor and brought in a water hose to wash the floorboards, so that all the water and the dirt ran down the hill. I don’t know if this is true, but it does fit my father’s character.
Ferus / chapter 6
I never knew a time when Wallace was not an artist. I still have strong memories of him working on the left side of the living room in Beverly Glen. The smell of parchment paintings is still in my nostrils. I often think of my dad’s artworks in more of a textural context than a visual one. The smell of the parchment paintings (painted Hebrew characters) was a mixture of chemicals and glue, much like his later Verifax art. As a two-year-old, I was never told not to touch something, so I remember touching the paintings and feeling the layers of paint and glue over the work itself.
Wallace’s workspace in the Beverly Glen House always appeared calm and organized, but not in an obsessive manner. It must have been difficult for him to work, since people came by all the time. The compactness of the house appears to have pleased my mom and dad. All the homes I lived in, except in San Francisco, were tiny; even the Topanga Canyon house, which had a significant amount of property around it, was a small structure. But the Beverly Glen house, in all its glory, was just a shack on stilts.
CHARLES BRITTIN / Wallace Berman’s “Cross,” Ferus Gallery, 1957
COPYRIGHT © J. PAUL GETTY TRUST. SEE PAGE 312 FOR FULL CITATION.
One of the many people who came to the house was Walter Hopps. I knew Walter all my life, from a distance. He struck me as a nice person, but to a kid, his personality was cold. I never felt any warmth towards him, but I assume he must have shared many things with Wallace. Both had wives named Shirley, for one, and Walter was a jazzer, like my dad. Indeed, as a teenager, he even saw my dad dance in a South Central nightclub and commented that Wallace had a presence from the very beginning. They approached art from the same angle; even though Walter went to school, he was very much a street-smart guy who knew art. Most people at that time who were into art, I think, were either wealthy or very well educated.