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. The Print Mint was originally owned by poet Don Schenker and his wife Alice, later partnered in the business with Bob and Peggy Rita.
History
Don and Alice Schenker started The Print Mint as a picture-framing shop and retailer of posters and fine art reproductions on Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley, California, in December 1965, originally sharing a store with Moe's Books, but later on moving into a separate location down the block. Schencker's first comics job was a reprint of Joel Beck's Lenny of Laredo, published by the Print Mint in April 1966.Posters
The Print Mint soon opened a wholesale division, publishing and distributing posters. The dance venues at The Avalon Ballroom and The Fillmore were advertised by posters designed by artists Stanley Mouse, Rick Griffin, Alton Kelley, Victor Moscoso, and others. These posters were soon in much demand, and The Print Mint distributed many of them along with work by Peter Keymack, Hambly silkscreens, Solo Period posters, M. C. Escher prints, Neon Rose, Bob Frieds Food line, and many others.Expansion to the Haight
In December 1966, the Print Mint opened a second store on Haight Street, in the Haight Ashbury district of San Francisco, in a building that Moskowitz had purchased to install a book store. 1967 was an eventful time, and the store became a center of neighborhood activities and a main source of countercultural information and creative energy to the huge influx of young people coming into San Francisco that summer. It grew from being a simple retailer into a complex cross-country distribution and then publishing operation. In December 1967, however, Moskowitz forfeited the building and his plans for a second location for Moe's Books, bringing a demise to Print Mint in San Francisco.Underground comics
Beginning in 1968, but really getting going in 1969, publishing and distribution of underground comics became The Print Mint's major endeavor. With their partners the Ritas,, Don did the organizing, editing and layout of the books, working with the artists. Bob and Peggy Rita and Alice handled the distribution and the day-to-day operations of the business. Alice also oversaw the Berkeley store. The company's main office was located at 830 Folger Avenue in Berkeley.The first comix Print Mint published was the weekly tabloid Yellow Dog, edited by Don Schencker. Eventually, the Print Mint published such underground comix notables as Robert Crumb, Trina Robbins, Rick Griffin, S. Clay Wilson, Victor Moscoso, Gilbert Shelton, Spain Rodriguez, and Robert Williams. Titles they published included Zap Comix, Junkwaffel, Bijou Funnies, and Moondog. In addition they published one of the first ecologically themed comics, The Dying Dolphin, a solo effort by rock poster artist Jim Evans with contributions by Ron Cobb and Rick Griffin.
As the first publisher to invest heavily in the underground comix movement, the Print Mint was instrumental in the form's popularity and widespread reach in the late 1960s and early 1970s. As they were growing the market and putting money in the hands of the cartoonists, however, their business practices were called into question by a number of the more popular artists. A few of those, including Gilbert Shelton and Frank Stack, broke off in early 1969 to form their own publisher, Rip Off Press, taking some of the more established cartoonists with them. From that point on, the Print Mint focused more on bringing new talent into the burgeoning underground industry.
The Print Mint's bold experiment with Arcade: The Comix Revue, started in 1975 and edited by Art Spiegelman and Bill Griffith, with most issue's sporting a cover by R. Crumb, paved the way for RAW! just a few years later.
Legal troubles
The Print Mint weathered a lawsuit filed over the publication of Zap Comix, particularly issue #4. The Schenkers were arrested and charged with publishing pornography by the Berkeley Police Department. Previous to that, Simon Lowinsky, owner of the Phoenix Gallery on College Avenue in Berkeley, had organized an exhibition of the Zap collective's original drawings, and had been arrested on the same charge. His case came to trial first. He was acquitted after supportive testimony from Peter Selz, a prominent figure in the art world. At that point the city dropped the charges against the Print Mint.Later years
By 1975 the partnership with the Ritas was not going smoothly. Alice Schenker says that an agreement was made to split the business between retail and wholesale, the Schenkers taking the retail store and the Ritas the wholesale and publishing. The Print Mint ceased publishing comics in 1978, but the poster shop continued. In 1985 the Schenkers sold the store. It continues to this day, looking much the same.Titles published
- All Girl Thrills — all female contributors: Trina Robbins, Barbara "Willy" Mendes, and Julie Wood
- American Flyer Funnies #1 — anthology title; contributors included Larry Welz
- Arcade — magazine-sized comics anthology created and edited by Art Spiegelman and Bill Griffith. Contributors included Spain Rodriguez, Justin Green, Kim Deitch, Robert Crumb, and Charles Bukowski.
- Bijou Funnies #2-4 — anthology with early work by Jay Lynch, Art Spiegelman, Gilbert Shelton, and Skip Williamson; issues #5-8 picked up by Kitchen Sink Press
- The Captain — Hak Vogrin and Jean Einback Vogrin
- Captain Guts — Larry Welz
- The Collected Cheech Wizard — Vaughn Bode; reprinted from a Company & Sons title
- Coochy Cooty Men's Comics — Robert Williams
- Despair — Robert Crumb
- Deviant Slice Funnies — Tom Veitch & Greg Irons
- The Dying Dolphin — Jim Evans
- El Perfecto — Timothy Leary Benefit
- Feds 'n' Heads — reprint of Gilbert Shelton self-published comic
- Girl Fight Comics — Trina Robbins
- Guano Comix #4 — anthology title
- Heavy Tragi-Comics — Greg Irons
- Hit the Road — Pat Ryan and Russ Rosander
- Human Drama — anthology title edited by Jim Madow featuring Spain Rodriguez, Mark Fisher, Leslie Cabarga, Alan Weiss, Howard Hopkirk, Roger Brand, Greg Irons, and Madow
- Insect Fear — horror anthology inspired by EC Comics
- Junkwaffel — Vaughn Bodē; issue #5 by Last Gasp
- Kukawy Comics — Ϗύκλωψ / Κύκλωψ = GREEK for Ϗýklops John Thompson
- Lemme Outa Here — stories of life in mid-century American suburbs edited by Diane Noomin, featuring Noomin, Michael McMillan, Robert Armstrong, Bill Griffith, Robert Crumb, Aline Kominsky, Kim Deitch, Justin Green, Mark Beyer, and M. K. Brown
- Lenny of Laredo — reprint of Joel Beck's 1965 work
- Light Comitragies — mostly Greg Irons
- Manhunt #1 — feminist comic with contributors like Aline Kominsky, Trina Robbins, Ted Richards, and Bobby London; 2nd issue published by Cartoonists Co-Op Press
- Mean Bitch Thrills — Spain Rodriguez
- Meef Comix — Fred Schrier
- Moondog — George Metzger
- Occult Laff Parade — anthology title; featured a story by Jay Kinney and Ned Sonntag entitled "Bud Tuttle and Commander Jesus"
- Real Pulp — anthology; issue #1 featured first Zippy the Pinhead strip
- San Francisco Comic Book — anthology title at first published with the San Francisco Comic Book Company; later picked up by Last Gasp
- Show + Tell Comics — Justin Green
- Spiffy Stories — anthology title
- Tales of Toad — Bill Griffith; 3rd issue published by Cartoonists Co-Op Press
- Truckin' — George Metzger
- Tales from the Tube — Robert Crumb, Rick Griffin, Harold Ward, Robert Williams, and S. Clay Wilson
- Tuff Shit Comics — anthology title
- Uneeda Comics — Robert Crumb
- Vaughn Bode's The Man
- Yellow Dog — anthology started as a tabloid and then converted into a comics magazine
- Young Lust — anthology title co-edited by Bill Griffith and Jay Kinney; contributors included Guy Colwell; later published by Last Gasp
- Zam — Robert Crumb, Rick Griffin, Victor Moscoso, Robert Williams, S. Clay Wilson
- Zap Comix — R. Crumb-edited anthology