enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Haight Street Art Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haight_Street_Art_Center

    Haight Street Art Center (HSAC) is a non-profit art space that focuses on poster and printmaking community located in San Francisco, California.They provide education regarding poster art with a printmaking studio, as well as exhibits for artists in the gallery space.

  3. Bound Together - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bound_Together

    Bound Together is an anarchist bookstore and visitor attraction on Haight Street in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood of San Francisco. Its Lonely Planet review in 2016, commenting on its multiple activities, states that it "makes us tools of the state look like slackers". [1] The bookstore carries new and used books as well as local authors. [2]

  4. List of underground newspapers of the 1960s counterculture

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_underground...

    Dock of the Bay, San Francisco; Free Spaghetti Dinner, Santa Cruz; From Out of Sherwood Forest, Newport Beach; Good Times, San Francisco, 1969–1972 (formerly San Francisco Express-Times) Haight Ashbury Free Press, San Francisco; Haight Ashbury Tribune, San Francisco (at least 16 issues) Illustrated Paper, Mendocino, 1966–1967

  5. Print Mint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Print_Mint

    The Print Mint, Inc. was a major publisher and distributor of underground comix based in the San Francisco Bay Area during the genre's late 1960s-early 1970s heyday. Starting as a retailer of psychedelic posters, the Print Mint soon evolved into a publisher, printer, and distributor. It was "ground zero" for the psychedelic poster.

  6. Haight-Ashbury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haight-Ashbury

    Before the completion of the Haight Street Cable Railroad in 1883, what is now the Haight-Ashbury was a collection of isolated farms and acres of sand dunes. The Haight cable car line, completed in 1883, connected the east end of Golden Gate Park with the geographically central Market Street line and the rest of downtown San Francisco.

  7. Diggers (theater) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diggers_(theater)

    The Diggers took their name from the original English Diggers (1649–1650) who had promulgated a vision of society free from buying, selling, and private property. [2] [5] During the mid- and late 1960s, the San Francisco Diggers organized free music concerts and works of political art, provided free food, medical care, transport, and temporary housing and opened stores that gave away stock.

  8. Haight Street - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haight_Street

    Haight Street (/ ˈ h eɪ t-/) is the principal street in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district, also known as the Upper Haight due to its elevation. The street stretches from Market Street, through the Lower Haight neighborhood, to Stanyan Street in the Upper Haight, at Golden Gate Park. In most blocks it is residential, but in the Upper and ...

  9. The Red Victorian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Red_Victorian

    The Red Vic independent movie theater, operated by a collective, opened in July 1980 in rented space in the Red Victorian and later moved to a separate building on Haight Street. [ 20 ] [ 21 ] In the 1980s, it began annual screenings of "The Hippie Temptation", Harry Reasoner 's shocked coverage of the Summer of Love on the first broadcast of ...