In July 1952, artist and theater director W. Edwin Ver Becke founded San Francisco Community Theater at 3119 Fillmore Street, an address that had previously been listed as 3115 Fillmore. The group’s plays were usually shown at the
California Palace of the Legion of Honor but the 3119 address served as their headquarters and also as an art gallery that displayed work by
Antonio Sotomayor. The venture did not last long and soon artists
Jess Collins and Harry Jacobus, along with poet
Robert Duncan, took over the building’s lease, founding the King Ubu Gallery (an allusion to
Alfred Jarry’s 1896 play
Ubu Roi). Collins and Duncan bought the stage lighting from Ver Becke but made minimal changes prior to opening their gallery on December 20, 1952. King Ubu lasted for one year before closing. Ten months later, the address was taken over by five painter friends (
Wally Hedrick,
Deborah Remington, John Allen Ryan, David Simpson, and
Hayward King), and the poet
Jack Spicer, who was their teacher at the nearby
California School of Fine Arts. They decided to call it "the 6 Gallery" as there were six founders. The name was Remington's idea. Later historians have used the word "Six" but Remington confirmed in a subsequent interview that the gallery was always meant to have the numeral form as its name. A plywood "6" was hung outside the front door and wrapped in fairy lights. The group held fundraising events to cover the cost of plasterboard to give the gallery space to display paintings. The gallery was run as a cooperative with a rotating director, but Hedrick kept the role as no one else wanted it. He was replaced in 1957 by
Manuel Neri. Hedrick's wife
Jay DeFeo was one of the first non-founding members and acted as secretary when John Allen Ryan was out of town. The gallery became a focal point of the city's arts scene and was praised in the local press. Various experimental art shows were held there including poetry readings, plays, light shows, nude dances, and much that is hard to categorize. On January 20, the gallery held a reading of Robert Duncan's play
Faust Foutu, which was attended by Allen Ginsberg and
Peter Orlovsky. Duncan stripped naked at the end of the show, which inspired Ginsberg and gave the gallery "an aura of notoriety", according to one historian.
October 1955 reading As Ginsberg recalled, "The Six Gallery reading had come about when Wally Hedrick, who was a painter and one of the major people there, asked [Kenneth]
Rexroth if he knew any poets that would put on a reading." Rexroth liked the idea of staging a showcase for local poets, and he recommended that Hedrick speak to Ginsberg. Hedrick approached Ginsberg in summer of 1955 and requested his assistance in identifying
Bay Area poets for a reading at "The 6". According to
Jonah Raskin:
Peter Forakis created a poster announcing the reading. A hundred postcards were mailed. Ginsberg supplied the text for the postcards, which were titled "6 Poets at 6 Gallery": Starting at about 8:00 p.m. on October 7, 1955,
Philip Lamantia,
Michael McClure,
Philip Whalen, Ginsberg, and
Gary Snyder—who until then were known only within a close group of friends and by a few established writers such as
Lionel Trilling and
William Carlos Williams—presented a sampling of their latest works. For McClure and Ginsberg, it was their first ever public reading. They were introduced by Rexroth, a San Francisco poet of an older generation, who acted as a kind of father-figure for the young poets, and had helped build their burgeoning literary community through his weekly
salons. An estimated 100–125 people were in attendance that night. The gallery space was not especially large, measuring 20 x 25
feet with a dirt floor. The attendees included a drunken
Jack Kerouac, who collected donations for wine, "the reading itself delayed while he ran out for gallon jugs, which were passed around throughout the reading." He declined to read his own work but cheered the other poets on, shouting "Yeah! Go! Go!" during their performances. Nevertheless, Kerouac was able to recall much of what occurred, and wrote a thinly fictionalized account in his 1958 novel
The Dharma Bums (Ginsberg is "Alvah Goldbrook" and the poem is called "Wail"), which served to memorialize and mythologize the Six Gallery reading. After that, the location changed hands many times. Eventually, the Fillmore Street addresses were renumbered, and "3119" stopped being used. In 1995, Tony Willard visited the spot of the original Six Gallery building, and wrote that it "houses a store called Silkroute International, whose rugs and pillows spill onto the sidewalk." == Footnotes ==