Al's Bar was a Los Angeles bar in the American Hotel that served as a gathering spot for that era's downtown art and music scenes. At the time of its closing, it was primarily known as the West Coast's oldest punk club, but over the years it regularly hosted theater plays, art exhibitions, and "No Talent Nights".
Al's Bar (1979-2001)
History
In 1979, Marc Kreisel and his partners purchased the dilapidated American Hotel on Hewitt Street, with a view to creating a cultural hub for the burgeoning art scene forming in downtown Los Angeles. In addition to converting the hotel into galleries, studios, and a home for artists, Kreisel, who viewed the whole building as "one big art show," purchased the ground floor bar from Alfonso Vasquez, the bar's namesake. Al's Bar was created to give artists a place to discuss art over beer.
The "Money Pump"
Inspired by Joseph Beuys's Honey Pump, Marc Kreisel envisioned Al's Bar as a "money pump" for circulating money around its community of artists. He imagined this surplus supporting a gallery, where artists could show their work. As Kreisel himself noted, "It was a capitalistic endeavor to support the arts by itself- an alternative to the feds and the state and getting grants." As such, the bar attracted a broad clientele, whose purchases actually covered salaries and band fees. The neon sign outside the bar forewarned customers to "Tip or Die." Al's Bar eventually acquired works by dozens of artists, including Katy Crowe, Scott Greiger, James Griffith, Steve Hurd, Bruce Nauman, Allen Ruppersberg, Coleen Sterritt, and John Valadez, among others.
Atmosphere
A cross between CBGB's and Cheers, considered this friendly underground bar Los Angeles' "last real rock 'n roll club", since it was one of the rare spots where bands "let loose and got wild". In 1982, the Downtown Breakfast Club awarded Al's Bar a Rose for being a great hangout.
In 1990, Marc Kreisel opened American Gallery adjacent the bar, where scores of artists exhibited their works. Sculptor Robert Gero had an exhibition at the American Gallery in 1990, while Raymond Pettibon, of Black-Flag cover art fame, exhibited drawings in Al's Bar in 1996, accompanied by seven punk-era bands. "Functionists High" featured works by nine mainstays of the Los Angeles scene, including Hans Burkhardt, Claire Falkenstein, Ynez Johnston, Helen Lundeberg, June Wayne, and Emerson Woelffer, was accompanied by a catalog essay written by Peter Plagens
Al's Bar Records
The compilation album "Live at Al's Bar" was released in 1997. The same year saw "Al's Bar, What a Dive" Bands featured on the "Al's Bar, What a Dive" CD: Spent Idols, POPDeFECT, TVTV$, TouchCandy, Snair, Flourescein, Bottom 12, Texas Terri, The Humpers, Lutefisk, Extra Fancy, 1000 Mona Lisas, Mother Tongue. c1996 Recorded live at Al's Bar Oct / Nov 1995. Live mix by John Falzarano / Studio On Wheels. Post-Mix by John Bird at Parking Lot Studios.
In addition to hosting original theater, Al's Bar's hosted a weekly "No Talent Night" that enabled poets, actors, musicians, and magicians to try out new material.