It would be a crime to sum up the career of Dennis Larkins by saying that, over the past fifty years or so, he's moved from glorifying classic American images of the 1950's and 60's to using zany sci-fi characters to make classic American images of the 1950's and 60's appear terrifying. Equally heinous, though, would be to identify Larkins (who will be signing his new book
at the Jennie Cooley Gallery in Santa Fe next weekend) as “that Grateful Dead guy” because of the amazing but infrequent artwork Larkins has produced for the Dead since the early 80's.
A better description of Larkins' diverse legacy—which includes masterful works ranging from watercolor to rock concert posters to acrylics—might be “dark satirist,” because Larkins, who could be called the Kurt Vonnegut of visual art, has always turned heads by juxtaposing the mundane with the truly fantastic.
Take “Seedling,” an acrylic/painted relief, for example. In it, Larkins expertly paints a scene of a smiling woman who just gave birth in a cheesily idyllic hospital room, complete with roses by her bedside and flowery drapes. However, like many of Larkins' classic works, there's a big catch: The doctor and nurse effusively doting over the happy new mom are wearing strange oxygen masks and electronic frontpacks straight out of
Lost in Space
—and the baby is a green alien with tiny antennae and bug eyes.
Somehow, Larkins has created countless images with the
I Love Lucy
-meets-
Invaders from Mars
theme and truly kept each one unique. Most impressive in the pages of
Startling Art
, though, are photographs of the giant-scale set designs Larkins designed and built for Bay Area promoter Bill Graham in the 70's and 80's. Larkins painted most of the massive images on the floor at San Francisco's Winterland, the now-defunct mini-arena that was the Grateful Dead's “home field” in the 70's, before assembling them as sets surrounding the stage at Oakland Coliseum for mega-concerts by bands including Led Zeppelin, the Rolling Stones and Santana. The detail, creativity and serious manual labor involved with these incredible set designs really comes through in the photos, which actually make one wish concerts of that scale were still prevalent. Perhaps the Flaming Lips should give Larkins a call the next time the group play Red Rocks.