Las Vegas debut of the Erotic Heritage Museum

EROTIC HERITAGE MUSEUM

OPENS IN LAS VEGAS.


Sin City added yet another premiere adult destination to its roster when the Erotic Heritage Museum opened here earlier this month. The gala event for artists, critics, and friends drew a crowd of several hundred that experienced art, film, memorabilia, and events including a performance art wedding staged in a Grecco-Roman-style wedding chapel by artist Keith Murray. Murray’s service in which he was dressed as half groom and half. bride was officiated by an “Elvis Ministor.” Also on hand were head-to-toe, spandex- and vinyl-clad women tooling around the museum in mechanized vehicles as part of Jeff Gord’s performance art piece, “Mechanised Maidens”.

The museum is owned and managed by the Exodus Trust, a non-profit California Trust that’s sole purpose is to bridge the gap between that which is commercial and often misidentified as pornographic, and that which is aesthetic encompassing movements including folk, pop, and fine art. And just this morning, the museum received its license to campaign for charitable donations of both money and art. The campaign is entitled, “Save Our Erotic Heritage”, and of course all donations are tax deductible.

According to Grand Patron Harry Mohney, “tonight is a celebration of human sexual artifacts and should be inspiration to the inhibited to enjoy their sexuality.” When asked about the turnout, trust manager Dr. and Reverend R. Theodore McIlvenna, a preacher for over 40 years and PhD, said: “With attendees from nineteen countries and twenty-five states, I’m surprised by the wide diversity of attendees and yet I haven’t heard one negative comment.” He continued, “tonight is a testament to the fact that if people want to know, it’s here. If we can’t take care of ourselves, we won’t be able to take care of others.”

The museum encompasses over 24,000 square feet of permanent and featured exhibit space with a special emphasis on the unfolding of the American Sexual Revolution of the 20th Century. The Museum opens with the theme “Erotic Art Now,” and features the following artists: Francois Dubeau, Bobby Logic, Todji Kurtzman, Jacqueline Cooper, Keith Murray, Michael Grecco, and Jeff Gord.

The largest archive of its kind in the world (twenty-five warehouses full) provides rich material for rotating exhibitions selected by the curatorial staff. Many formats and media represent a wide spectrum of behaviors and attitudes including many rarities never before available to the public including important documents of science, history, and art.

The collection of the Moving Image, the most notable single collection in the Archive, provides focus for understanding the sexual revolution of the mid-20th Century. The Museum offers cultural context for appreciating these works many of which are priceless artifacts which the Museum endeavors to collect and preserve.

The Museum is an ideal environment for lectures, symposiums, classes and workshops to promote artistic, educational, scientific, and literary functions. The Erotic Heritage Museum supports academic pursuits and research through the Institute for Advanced Study of Human Sexuality [www.iashs.edu] and its satellite campus. Continuing education will also be offered through The American College of Sexologists [www.americancollegeofsexologists.org], as well as other affiliated academic associations and organizations.

According to Dr. Laura Henkel, artistic director for the Museum, “I encourage the residents of Las Vegas to visit the Museum. This Museum is for everyone. It’s an opportunity to learn about ourselves and about others, and a delightful way to spend a few hours. I’m certain you’ll experience at least one tingle, one smile while visiting the largest erotic art collection in the world.”

Located just a short trip from The Strip at 3275 Industrial, doors open daily at 11 a.m., admission is $15, $12 for students and seniors with ID. Las Vegas residents with valid local ID will also receive 50% off admission. All visitors including those to the gift shop must be 18 years of age.


Las Vegas Mural Mystery



We need your help! 


Las Vegan Kathleen Bell has asked for our help in finding out information about this mural.  It was acquired by her father, a prominent Las Vegan, Charles Bell, but she is trying to find out more info.  It is about 3.5' x 6'.  It looks like it was done in the early 1970s when many of the Hollywood stars featured in the mural were undergoing a career renaissance.

It is believed that this is part of a bigger mural and that it hung behind the registration desk of a Las Vegas Strip Hotel.


If you recognize it or have any information about the creator of this mural and/or why he was commissioned please let us know!

I just received an email from Kathleen Bell with some more sketchy info:

Folklore has it that an Art Director or Sketch Artist, someone of that
ilk came to Las Vegas in the (50's - 60's?) gambled, couldn't pay the
large debt in full. Rather than being escorted to the desert, this
person was allowed to paint this piece and it hung in the (unknown)
Casino's coffee shop. I am unable to find a signature. There may be
another piece somewhere that has a signature, or perhaps the artist did
not want it known.

Many unanswered questions. I am trying to ascertain
the veracity of the folklore associated with the chiaroscuro with
respect to the identity of the artist, the year it was painted, the
location and exactly where it hung and for how long, (casino & location
in the casino), who commissioned said piece, as well as the particular
format and initial ownership. Another curiousity, why was he allowed
to paint this instead of being escorted to the desert, a sweetheart
deal for sure.






Huntridge Theater Adapative Re-use Plans to be Unveiled



For those who have been following the saga of the wonderful Huntridge Theater building I have good news.

As many of you know, I have been working with the Save the Huntridge Steering Committee which includes Brian Paco Alvarez, Jack LeVine and Pam Hartley.  Over the last few months we have been working with Eli Mizrachi, the owner of the building, in  attempts to find a solution to saving the building.

Eil visited Southern California where there are a number of old movie theaters that have been saved and undergone adaptive re-use.  When he returned to Las Vegas he was inspired by what he saw and began working with an architect on new plans. 

We met with Eli earlier this summer and he showed us the plans.  They are wonderful and we encouraged him to have a public unveiling so that he could begin to build support for the project.

Well, that part of the puzzle is becoming a reality. 


On Wednesday, August. 13th at Rainbow's End, 1100 E. Sahara Avenue, Eli will unveil the plans.  From 6:30 - 8:00 pm, the public and the press can stop by, see the plans and learn more about how this wonderful building can be saved.

So, if you love this building, we hope to see you there!

Legendary Hughes Aide Robert Maheu has died


According to the Las Vegas Review Journal:

Robert Maheu, long known as the right-hand man to Howard Hughes, has died. He was 90.

Maheu died Monday night after an undisclosed illness, a spokeswoman for his oldest son said.


He grew up in Maine, and joined the FBI as World War II was getting started. Later on, he started a security company that did work for the CIA. His work included a failed attempt to assassinate Fidel Castro.

Through his business, Maheu began working for Hughes. He moved to Las Vegas soon after, and eventually became Hughes' public face as the billionaire became more and more reclusive.

"When he came here," Maheu said in a 2000 interview with the Review-Journal, "he wanted to tie up all the property on the Strip to develop it properly. He didn't want it to be honky-tonk or like Coney Island."

Services for Maheu are scheduled for noon Saturday at St. Viator Catholic Church, 4150 S. Eastern Ave.


From the Las Vegas Sun:

Robert Maheu, the longtime confidant of Howard Hughes, has died at age 91.

Maheu, a former FBI agent, served as Hughes' right-hand man and alter ego for 13 years. Maheu moved to Las Vegas from Los Angeles in 1966 when Hughes relocated to the top floor of the Desert Inn, which Hughes purchased when hotel management asked him to leave that year in time for New Year's Eve crowds.

“We weren’t gambling and we were tying up their best rooms — they were justified in trying to kick us out,” Maheu recalled in a 2004 interview with the Las Vegas Sun.

Maheu was born in Waterville, Maine, in 1918. After graduating from the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass., in 1950, he joined the Federal Bureau of Investigation. During World War II he posed as a German sympathizer.

In 1947, Maheu established his own investigative company. He also worked for the Central Intelligence Agency. He later admitted: "The CIA was my first steady client, giving me 'cut-out' assignments (those jobs in which the agency could not officially be involved)." This work brought him into contact with Howard Hughes, and in the late 1950s Maheu worked for him on a freelance basis. This included intimidating would-be blackmailers and obtaining information on business rivals.

Maheu began full-time work for Howard Hughes in 1966. He moved to Las Vegas, where he ran Hughes's casinos. Maheu explained later what his role was in the operation: "When he came here, he wanted to tie up all the property on the Strip to develop it properly. He didn't want it to be honky-tonk or like Coney Island. Hughes was a catalyst in the city cleaning up its act."

After losing his job with Howard Hughes in 1970, Maheu established a new company in Las Vegas called Robert A. Maheu and Associates. In 1993 Maheu published the book, "Next to Hughes," an autobiography written with Richard Hack.

In 13 years serving with Hughes, where he held the billionaire's power of attorney and spoke on Hughes' behalf for all public purposes, Maheu saw Hughes two times.

Maheu had battled cancer and heart problems. He would have turned 92 in October.