Along with the artist Ed Kienholz, Walter started the Ferus Gallery, where Wallace had his first solo gallery show in 1957. It’s unclear what exactly happened, but the police were called and informed that the show contained obscene works. The police came by and shut it down. There was a daylong trial, my father was convicted of exhibiting pornography, and he had to serve jail time. Luckily, his good friend Dean Stockwell bailed him out of jail. It seems that Ed and Walter were cheerful enough that they got some sort of publicity, and if my father rotted in a jail cell—then what the hell! The Ferus Gallery would go on to become a major force in Los Angeles art culture, under the direction of Irving Blum, who took over curatorial duties from Ed and Walter and later gave Andy Warhol his first solo exhibition. There’s some controversy over whether Wallace was dropped from the gallery when Irving took over, or just left when he was convicted of the obscenity charge. But whatever Irving’s intentions, Wallace for sure was not going to do another exhibition at Ferus.
The irony of it all is that there was only one artwork in the exhibition that was very sexually graphic. This was a close-up image of a penis in a vagina and was hard to miss, but somehow the vice squad did. Instead, they chose to bust my father for an image that wasn’t by him, but rather by Marjorie Cameron, a drawing that was part of and within his assemblage. Wallace’s arrest might have been seen as a joke to some, but he took it very seriously and was deeply offended to be in that position. He was disappointed that mainstream culture would want to incarcerate him. He never mentioned what became of the artwork from that show. Most of it disappeared. Some claim that a worker at the Ferus Gallery, not knowing it was art, threw it away, and some, like me, feel that Walter and Ed knew a lot more about what happened to it. One artwork from the show was later discovered in Walter’s personal collection.
Wallace never had any harsh feelings towards Walter or Ed, but I suspect Ed didn’t like Wallace. I’ve heard rumors to the effect that Ed was jealous of a woman’s attention to my dad, or perhaps he was simply jealous of Wallace’s art, but I do believe Ed himself was the one who called the cops on the show. He probably didn’t think Wallace would get arrested; more likely he just wanted to create some publicity, which he did. But due to this experience, Wallace never had another solo commercial gallery exhibition in his lifetime. Wallace soured on the very idea of becoming a “professional” in the art world, and it was at this time he made the decision to move us to San Francisco.
Cameron / chapter 7
The artist behind the “obscene” drawing for which my dad was arrested, Marjorie Cameron—better known to her friends and fans simply as Cameron—might be one of the most fascinating women to emerge in the 20th century, for various reasons. She was married to the rocket scientist Jack Parsons, a principal founder of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and a well-known occultist, and she became his widow in 1952 when he accidentally blew himself up in his lab at their Pasadena home. My mom told me a bit about him. Without a doubt, he was a wild one. He and Cameron must have been a standout couple in an era when things were hush-hush. Their circle included fellow rocket scientists and various science fiction writers, including L. Ron Hubbard, later founder of Scientology. Some have claimed that Hubbard went through Parsons’s trash to come up with the seeds or concept of Scientology. It’s clear that from someone’s trash, another can find gold if he or she knows what to look for.
WALLACE BERMAN / Cameron, 1962
Cameron herself was very much a free-spirited individual. She was a witch, yes, but to define her by that one category would be a huge mistake. As a child and as an adult, I never once had a discussion with her about her specific interest in magick, though the occult arts were obviously a subject she had a deep interest in. Cameron, according to my mom, compartmentalized her social life to a certain degree. She first met my dad and mom at her house that she shared with Jack. It was an afternoon party, and Cameron was drawn to Wallace and Shirley because they were the only artists at this specific party. Everyone else was a rocket scientist or in some other science field. Parsons was always friendly to my mom and dad, but it was Cameron who was drawn to my parents, and without her presence, I don’t think they would have entered the world of Jack Parsons. My mom has commented to me how handsome Jack was, in the movie star mode of handsomeness. My parents had dinner over at their house, and Shirley mentioned that Jack would make a dramatic entrance into the room. It was more his style than anything else. He knew his presence made an impression on people.
Through Cameron, Wallace and Shirley met actor and raconteur Samson de Brier, who invited them to his Hollywood house to attend his big Halloween party, the theme of which was “Come as Your Madness.” My dad dressed up as Alice B. Toklas, Gertrude Stein’s better half. That particular party was the inspiration for Kenneth Anger’s Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome (1954). Cameron played the Scarlet Woman in the film, and Anaïs Nin starred as Astarte, with her head in a birdcage, which I believe was her costume for the original Halloween party. Joan Whitney, a close friend of my parents, played Aphrodite.
Samson was a total mystery to me as a kid, and now he’s even more so. Others have commented that his colorful stories about his life may not have been true, but to this day I believe what he said. Very much an iconic fixture in Hollywood, Samson had a house that was full of either treasures or junk, depending on one’s point of view. Always flamboyant, Samson, in my memory, was surrounded by women who appeared to have no trouble worshipping him. He was one of those figures that could stand perfectly still, not do anything, and yet attract attention from the right people. My parents were very fond of him, and he also caught the attention of Hollywood stars curious about the other side of life. Everyone from James Dean to Marlon Brando was believed to have spent some time at his pad on Barton Avenue. Anger shot Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome there. One presumes that the beautiful decor in that film came courtesy of Samson’s impressive collection of costumes and his distinct interior taste.
WALLACE BERMAN / Samson de Brier
My parents had no interest in magick or anything to do with religion or religious practices. On the other hand, they knew Cameron quite well. The artwork that got my dad busted for obscenity was a drawing she did for Semina. I’m not sure why she didn’t get involved in his defense, but I can’t imagine Cameron taking the initiative to go to court or even deal with the obscure hold of the law over art. At that time, too, she was still pretty distressed over her husband’s death. Cameron was very much a free-spirited person, and I regret that I didn’t hang out with her as an adult because she must have been a lot of fun. She never pushed her beliefs on anyone who was not interested, and she had a wide network of friends throughout the world. I’ve heard that Cameron was very close to Juliette Gréco, the celebrated French singer. What I am conscious of is that there wasn’t a sinister bone in her body, even though as a kid I knew she was a “witch” of some sort. I have to admit she did kind of look like a witch, but she was a cool-looking witch.
Semina / chapter 8
Due to Wallace’s friendship with Cameron, some commentators have tried to establish a “magick” connection between them. But while my Dad respected Cameron’s interest in the occult world, he had no interest in it. On the other hand, Wallace admired literature that has strains of the metaphysical. The big book in his life at that time was Hermann Hesse’s 1927 novel Steppenwolf. Hesse was considered a major writer during the ’20s, but he lost favor in the succeeding decades. In the 1960s, he would be rediscovered by, and become very popular with, students and the bohemian reading crowd. But in the ’50s, he was nearly unknown.