This 1967 Van Morrison show was on his first solo tour of the U.S. after leaving Them. He performed back to back weekends for the Family Dog, first at their short-lived Denver Dog venue, then in San Francisco at the Avalon Ballroom. Bay Area poster artists Stanley Mouse and Alton Kelley used reoccurring themes of Native America and psychedelic imagery for this design.
The postcard was only printed once before the concert. It measures 5" x 7 1/8".
Born in Detroit, Stanley Miller became known as "Mouse" after illustrating countless notebooks with his signature rodent sketch. Miller found an outlet for his creativity in pin-striping cars and airbrushing hot rod designs on posters and T-shirts. Mouse migrated to San Francisco in 1964, where he first met the artists associated with Family Dog, the organization producing dance concerts at the Avalon Ballroom. With collaborator Alton Kelley, Mouse experimented broadly with composition, lettering and imagery: Kelley came up with the ideas and Mouse executed the designs. Mouse and Kelley helped to establish the psychedelic style of expression under the name Mouse Studios.