Michael Dormer

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Michael Dormer
Michael Dormer

Michael Dormer (born 1935 in Hollywood, California, U.S.) is an American artist, cartoonist, writer, songwriter, entrepreneur, and creator of famed cartoon personalities Hot Curl and 1960’s TV star Shrimpenstein.

A childhood protégé of artist Louis Geddes, Dormer won national recognition at age twelve by taking first prize in a National Fire Prevention poster contest. At 18, Dormer was working as a freelance illustrator and cartoonist for local and national periodicals and creating experimental works of art.

A Minor Revolution, 1957, oil on masonite
A Minor Revolution, 1957, oil on masonite

In 1957 Dormer established a painting studio in La Jolla and moonlighted as a part-time night club comic and jazz poet at the Pour House, a cabaret in Bird Rock. He also published an art and poetry magazine, titled Scavenger.

In 1963, Dormer and his friend, Lee Teacher, sculpted Hot Curl,[1] a 400-pound concrete statue, and installed it on the rocks near the surf shack at La Jolla's famed Windansea Beach in San Diego, California. The sculpture of a mop-haired, 6-foot tall, knobby-kneed surfer gazed out at the sea with a beer in his hand. The pot-bellied surf god quickly became a nation-wide sensation appearing in SurfToons comics and as a plastic model kit, selling hundreds of thousands of copies. Today, Hot Curl appears regularly in Surfer (magazine).

In 1964, Dormer’s artwork was featured in the opening credits of Muscle Beach Party, which featured the first film appearance of Hot Curl[2] and “Little” Stevie Wonder. He also doubled as a talent scout for that film and subsequent surf films, recruiting actual surfers and surfer girls off the beaches of La Jolla to serve as extras.[3]

Short Stories, 1981, aluminum and plastic
Short Stories, 1981, aluminum and plastic

In 1967 Dormer and Teacher created and launched Shrimpenstein, an off-beat children’s television show which aired live weekdays on Channel 9 in Los Angeles. The program, which featured a miniature Frankenstein monster, created when his creator, Dr. Von Schtick, accidentally dropped a bag of jelly beans in his monster machine. The wacky adventures and double entendres of the little monster and his eccentric pals enchanted children of all ages, including Frank Sinatra and his Rat Pack.

In 1968, Dormer painted his first aluminum painting. Over the next 20 years, he continued to explore the limits of this medium, creating sculptural paintings that draw the viewer into a magical looking-glass landscape.

Dormer currently resides in Ocean Beach in San Diego, California. His art is a continuing experiment; each new burst of creativity yielding art that somehow twists the strands of his life into some strange window into another world.

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