Jacob Zeitlin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Cydebot (talk | contribs) at 03:55, 10 October 2016 (Robot - Moving category Writers from Los Angeles, California to Category:Writers from Los Angeles per CFD at Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2016 September 6.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Jacob Israel Zeitlin (November 4, 1902 – August 30, 1987) was an American bookseller, publisher, collector, poet and intellectual in Los Angeles in the mid-twentieth century.

He was born in Racine, Wisconsin, but moved with his family to Fort Worth, Texas in his childhood and to Los Angeles in 1925. For many years, Zeitlin lived in the Echo Park area of Los Angeles.[1] He opened his first bookshop in 1928, on Hope Street near 6th Street in downtown Los Angeles, and over the years moved his shop a number of times, its final location being in a converted barn on La Cienega Boulevard. He founded the Primavera Press, to produce fine printed books, and was a co-founder of the Rounce & Coffin Club,[2] which supported and encouraged fine printing in Southern California for many years. During his sixty years as a rare book seller, he and his many friends and associates, known as the "Zeitlin circle," was a significant force in the cultural and intellectual life of Los Angeles.[3] In 1963, he testified in a California Supreme Court obscenity hearing on Henry Miller's novel Tropic of Cancer.[4]

Zeitlin was one of the first people to exhibit the woodcuts of fellow Echo Park resident Paul Landacre[1] and the photographs of Edward Weston, as well as the first in America to exhibit the work of German artist Käthe Kollwitz. Zeitlin was also a poet and the editor of Opinion, a short-lived but influential Angeleno intellectual journal. A liberal in politics, Zeitlin was the campaign manager for Helen Gahagan Douglas' Senatoral campaign.[2] He also lobbied against the La Cienega Boulevard highway, bringing artistic friends such as actor and art dealer Joan Ankrum to Sacramento to protest.[5]

Notes

  1. ^ a b "Historic Echo Park: Jake Zeitlin". Retrieved 2011-06-24.
  2. ^ a b Starr, 308-316
  3. ^ Starr, op cit.
  4. ^ "Court to Rule on Lewdness of Miller's 'Tropic'". Independent. February 14, 1963. p. 39. Retrieved July 9, 2015 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  5. ^ Paul Karlstrom (1997–1998). "Oral history interview with Joan Ankrum, 1997 Nov. 5-1998 Feb. 4". Archives of American Art Oral History Program. Archives of American Art. Retrieved 3 June 2011.

References

  • Daniel Hurewitz (1997). Bohemian Los Angeles and the Making of Modern Politics. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520249257.
  • Kevin Starr (1990). Material Dreams: Southern California through the 1920s. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-504487-4.

External links