Meet Artist & Paige Young Friend Richard Sample. 1964-1969. Malibu. Venice. Celebrity Connections. Cult Characters. PART 1. Under Construction. Long. 2/12/2025

UPDATE: Richard L. Sample passed away on August 10, 2021.

Recently, I interviewed Richard Sample, Paige’s ex-boyfriend, friend, painter, sculptor, collage-maker, furniture-maker.

He now lives in the Coachella Valley area of California.

Richard Sample was still living in Sun Valley, Idaho when he was interviewed by Daily Mail reporter Ryan Parry in 2014. He says he doesn’t know who gave his name to Parry in association with Paige Young.

I am thankful to Richard Sample for inviting me to interview him in person. He took the time and effort to talk about Paige Young. It was not always easy for him (or me).

Thanks also to his niece Ellen (Ellie) Sample who has been insightful and supportive.

At the appointed time, I pulled up in my rental car and parked next to Richard’s house. There was a chainlink fence and gate that had a big padlock on it and the house was about 10 yards beyond it; I called out his name several times and did not get a response.

Luckily, Richard’s niece Ellie pulled up in her car, got out and told me Richard’s neighbor had called and told her that “there is woman in a red car in front of her Uncle Richard’s house.”

Ellie unlocked the gate and as we walked toward the house, she told me that Richard doesn’t hear very well now.

Ellie said that she was aware of the interview, but “didn’t ask him any questions so that he feels he has his own life.” Ellie lives one street over and has been very involved with caring for Richard since he moved to the area.

Richard warmly greeted me with a hug as did his dog Tolly. Ellie left us to the interview.

Richard Sample gave me permission to quote him in my article.

After we sat down to talk, Sample said to me:

“In 2001 I got throat cancer. I got radiation that burned the lining of my throat and my whole body. I also had a surgery and they cut my throat, it left me hard to talk, hard to drink, hard to eat… I am dying.”

Richard Sample is now 84 years old and does not hear too well or speak easily. I strained to hear his whisper of a raspy voice. I tried to understand what he was saying, but I didn’t always understand right away. I got better at understanding him as our conversation got going.

I will say Richard and I didn’t exactly have a normal flowing conversation. It was more of a question and answer session. Mostly the answers Richard gave took him a long time to say. I also got to know him as a person and shared my journey with researching Paige’s story.

This chapter will be a mixture of exact quotes from my tape recorder and hand written notes.

Background of Richard Sample and his connection to Los Angeles.

His father was Charles “Charlie” Sample, well known artist and metal smith, eccentric Los Angeles (and other parts of California) character.

Richard was born in Huntington Beach in 1936, 3 years after his parents married.

“My father (Charlie Sample) was a famous gold and silver smith. He made silver spurs for $8000. He also made belt buckles and horse saddles for Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, John Wayne, Mae West, Tim Holt,” said Richard.

Richard showed me a recent catalog for a company producing artistic, high quality western gear: Bohlin.

It featured Charlie Sample designs by name.

Horse saddles, bridles, spurs, belt buckles, bolo ties, rings, bracelets etc.

Richard’s mother, the former Virginia Smith, was one of about 8 women that modeled for the Columbia Pictures symbol.

His parents divorced when Richard was young and his mother remarried and had more children. Charlie moved on and did not see Richard for a while. Charlie had more marriages and children too.

Richard was upset and angry about his parents’ divorce. He “acted out negatively,” according to a relative I messaged on ancestry.com.

Infant Richard and his mother Virginia in a fire,
Father metalsmith artist Charlie Sample mentioned. LAT Jan. 18, 1937

News articles indicate that Richard’s
“negative acting out” included being on the wrong side of the law.

Richland Redland newspaper Oct. 31 1958
Santa Cruz Sentinel June 23rd 1960 Richard is in trouble again and was an inept burglar
. At some point after this Richard was tried and sent to prison at California Medical Facility in Vacaville California.

San Bernardino County Sun Feb. 29, 1960

LAT Feb. 1965 #1
LAT Feb. 20, 1965 #2 Richard is pictured here with his girlfriend Sylvia Nicolosi. Richard had served a few years for breaking-entering and had a previous record for arson. He was released in 1964. He vowed to himself to never again risk going to jail as the article attests. There is much more to Richard Samples’s prison stint in Vacaville, California. More on this story is forthcoming.

Richard and Paige got together after the end of his relationship with Sylvia Nicolosi shown above.

Sylvia is the daughter of famed LA based sculptor Joseph Nicolosi. She was one of three sisters.

I found several articles about her, she usually went by the name Maria.

Richard said he was in the military in the 1960s but “never made it to Vietnam, just Ft. Bragg North, Carolina.” He then showed me his military ID.

Richard and Paige met in the Art World of Malibu in about 1965. Jack Bailey had an art gallery for a few years. Bailey was most famous for being the host for the show “Queen For A Day.” This is a screen shot from ebay.

When our interview began, Richard was excited to tell me about aspects of Paige’s personality and character.

“Paige lived in a converted chicken coop on the edge of Malibu.

Vinicius Maciel on Pexels.com

Richard doesn’t remember which edge. (I’m confident it was the Topanga Canyon area or closeby.)

“For a dinner party, Paige had a different chair for each guest to use, not a matching (dining) set.”

“She would only eat salad if it was a day old.”

“I never saw Paige with shoes on.” (see chapter 1970 Warhol, Paige appears with her date at the Pasadena Art Museum Warhol opening and is photographed wearing a ankle length Rudi Gernreich dress barefoot. This is described by the reporter.)

“She is the only person I’ve ever known who ate ice cream with a fork,”

At the end of Richard and Paige’s first date….coming soon.

I asked about Hamish, the horse she had owned since junior high and still had in late 1964 according to her divorce filing. Richard responded she did not keep a horse in Malibu that he knew of. (Malibu is a town with a history of horse and stable owners and dedicated riders)

Paige would often strip down to her underwear and “run around topless or even nude.” Confirmed. Westwood neighbor Melanie told me that Paige often walked around nude in the shared backyard. It got on her nerves. Paige’s nudity was also described to me by Malibu friend Veronica.

When Richard met Paige

Paige was “going with a man named Harry Gesner.

“He was an architect who designed the Cooper house in Malibu. The house was on the cover of Life magazine. Harry Gesner was a client of my landlord.”

LAT July 19, 1964. This house has been famously known at the “Wave House” for decades. Sample called it “the Cooper House.” This name was used in earlier decades as we see from the LAT article in 1964. article. We see this in the article published in 1964. I’d love to know which issue of Life Magazine has an image of the house. Below we see a more recent view of the breathtaking Wave House in Malibu, CA.

“My landlord was Edward Ravick; he was involved with the Malibu Colony and maybe lived there at times,” said Richard

LAT Apr. 17, 1966. Richard was telling the truth. Article mentions Ravick and Gesner.

“Ravick sent Gesner and Paige to my studio in Malibu, to see my art.”

“This is how I met Paige.”

Detail of photo with artists Richard Sample left, Paige Young seated and Harry Gesner. Thank you Ellen Sample for use of this photo. This confirms what Richard Sample told me about Gesner is true. I had never heard of Gesner previously. I think more people have seen an image of the Wave House in Malibu, than know who designed it. It’s insane that he’s not more well known.

Eleven months ago, the world got a little duller with the passing of Malibu architect Harry Gesner at the age of 97. To say Gesner led a full life would be putting it mildly; the word “epic” might be more apt. Born in Oxnard to an engineer father and an artist mother, he learned to fly a plane at 14, stormed the beach at Normandy aged 19, worked as a waterski instructor in Lake Arrowhead, turned down an invitation from Frank Lloyd Wright to study at Taliesin in favor of being a tomb raider in Ecuador, squired models and actresses, fraternized with Errol Flynn and Marlon Brando, collected fancy sports cars, including a 1957 Mercedes 190SL convertible that he adapted to be all-electric, and surfed every day into his late ’80s

Pauline O’Connor DIRT, a magazine about real estate. June 1, 2023. Dirt is now called The Robb Report.

Paige Young was one of the models Harry squired.

Notice the names above. Edward Ravick being one. Before I saw the above pamphlet on ebay, Richard had told me about the buyers of his art: Vincent Price, Elaine de Kooning, and Harry Gesner, spelled incorrectly here, had purchased his art. Edward Ravick is also listed as a buyer.

This confirms Richard’s comments to me using all these names was the truth.

Elaine De Kooning attended the prison art exhibits that Richard participated in during his prison stint. Documented in newspapers.

I have found two mentions in an online Malibu newspaper on but not “saveable.” There was an Edward Ravick mentioned in a Malibu paper connected to real estate in the 1960s.

Jonathan Winters

I first contacted Richard by old school letter writing as there was no phone number for him that worked.

In that letter, I asked him if he knew of a connection with Paige and comedian-actor legend Jonathan Winters.

Early on in our interview, Richard asked why I wrote him asking about Winters.

I told him about the many newspaper interviews with Paige, I found from 1969 as she was traveling to promote Playboy After Dark.

In a few or the articles, it says Paige “appeared in many skits on The Jonathan Winters Show.”

(See my chapter on Paige’s Most Public Year 1969).

I then asked Richard why he called Jonathan Winters an “asshole” in his letter back to me.

His answer:

“Dennis, (does not remember his last name) was the owner of the Golden O Gallery, in Los Alamos, he told me that Jonathan Winters used to come and sit on the sidewalk at Dennis’ gallery and talk about Paige, and he had nothing good to say, it was always nasty or negative. I never met the man, but Dennis could tell you all about it. Richard added that Dennis never met Paige, but he “did know about her.”

Presumably because of Jonathan Winters.

He said he wasn’t aware of her appearing on the show during its run from 1967-1969.

He said it is a possibility that she did and he didn’t know about it.

Richard said that Paige never said anything about Jonathan Winters when they were together.

Winters was serious about his painting hobby.

He published a book of his paintings, Hangups.

signed by Jonathan Winters 1972, from his book Hangups.
Taken at my visit to the now closed Paley Media Center in Beverly Hills. Now closed. This is the version of the Winters show 67-69, that Paige Young’s press said she appeared in skits.

For many years Winters resided at least part time in Montecito, which is quite close to the town of Los Alamos.

Bill Cosby

was a frequent visitor and performer at many Playboy Clubs in the 60s 70s and maybe even beyond. He was a close friend to Hugh Hefner during those years.

Vintage Postcard. Playboy building on the right. It had the club, offices and a suite on the top floor Hugh Hefner while he was in LA.

Richard said he would occasionally pick up Paige at the Sunset Strip Playboy Club, after her shift. She worked at the club “for about 3 months,” he said.

Back of postcard. This Playboy Club was opened on New Year’s Eve 1964

“Bill Cosby was always trying to put the make on Paige. She didn’t want anything to do with him, she ignored him,” said Richard.

Richard then told me of one time when he was picking Paige up from the club after her shift. He saw Bill Cosby get angry at Paige after she rebuffed another one of his advances.

Richard then asked me if I was, “sure that Paige committed suicide and was not murdered.” I told him that I owned a copy of her death certificate with suicide by gun typed into the cause of death box cert. and I showed it to him.

“I wouldn’t ever think she would do that,” he said shaking his head at the document.

Bill Cosby at the Playboy Club in late 1967. LAT.

I decided not to tell Richard there is more proof of a suicide besides the death certificate: witnesses like neighbor Melanie, the man D. DeWitt listed as a “2nd witness” on the police report, the police at Paige’s house on that day. (See chapter on LAPD report) And the coroner’s report.

Celeste Huston told me in a Facebook exchange, which I no longer have, that Bill paid for Paige’s art lessons. She mentioned having lunch with Bill and Paige (and her husband John Huston) at the studio where he was filming in the early 70s.

Melanie is the only one of these people to have spoken out publicly about the day of Paige’s suicide.

“She was a good person. I really miss her.” Richard said about Paige a few times that afternoon.

More Background

Richard Sample moved to Venice Beach around 1967. He was motivated by the thriving art scene which was becoming more well-known on a national level. At least for those who paid attention to the Art scene.

His father Charlie Sample was already working and living in a Venice studio.

Darlene Valentine remembers Charlie as a landlord of sorts at the Venice Beach studios rented by DeWain Valentine, Richard Sample and Paige Young.

Richard got a studio for himself through his dad and Paige through her connection to Richard.

One of many newspaper articles on legendary Charlie/Charles Sample. Santa Maria Times Oct. 4, 1993. He lived to about 101 years. Mentions his career with Bholin and his clients, Gene Autry, Buck Jones, Ken Maynard and Tex Ritter.

“Paige liked my father, he made some jewelry for her.”

Paige joined Richard not too long after he moved to Venice Beach. He said he invited her and was thrilled that she moved in.

Records show that Richard was married in 1968 and not to Paige Young. His niece Ellie says Richard actually “leased” the Venice studio to Paige.

I asked Richard if he encountered any of the many artists who became famous out of the Venice Beach art scene (that started in the 1950s with “The Cool School” and the slightly later “Light and Space” or “Finish Fetish” art movement.)

He said “De Wain Valentine had a studio next door to Paige and me.” (See chapter on Pasadena Art Museum appearance with Warhol 1970)

Polyester Resin sculpture by DeWain Valentine, late 1960s.

“Valentine was a friend of mine.”

“Another friend, Larry Bell, lived across the street from us, on Market.

(Turns out Larry Bell had a building next door to Valentine, it was Robert Irwin who lived across the street. I did ask about Irwin and Ruscha but Richard did not recognize those names.)

“We (Paige and I) all used to hang out a lot, with all these (Venice artists) at Barney’s Beanery.”

After I returned from my trip, I did some research and I found quotes from Bell and Valentine in Art magazines.

There were a lot of actors and writers. We all used to hang out at a place called Barney’s Beanery, which was in West Hollywood. It was a local bar, a funky little place right at the end of La Cienega Boulevard where all the galleries were. So after the Tuesday or Thursday night openings, everyone would go up to Barney’s and hang around—there was The Raincheck Room on Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood as well.

Larry Bell in Whitewall: Beyond the Walls, Dec. 2019
The Brooklyn Rail May 2019 Interview with DeWain Valentine

See chapter on Pasadena Art Museum for much more on DeWain Valentine.

I spoke with Darlene Valentine, the first Mrs. Valentine. When she, her husband and children moved to Venice, California in 1965, they found the studio on Market St.

She remembers him being and eccentric character and a funny man. “You were not supposed to live in the studio, (only practice your art), but many did anyway.”

Cars

Paige owned a yellow Mustang, and Richard owned a red Corvette.

“A guy named Rex Ramsey stole our cars, but Paige got them back.”

Before the interview, I already knew about Rex Ramsey; he’s connected to Mark F. Segal, through renting Segal’s (where Paige lived as his wife in 1963 and 64) house at 4144 Crisp Canyon in Sherman Oaks. Both men spent a career heavily involved with cars: sales, importing and racing. Ramsey designed a successful race car once. He did some stunt driving in Hollywood and is credited in the 1968 hit Disney hit The Love Bug.

Rex Ramsey told me Mark’s family had a series of car dealerships and a towing service business. “They were quite well off,” Ramsey said. Otherwise he said he did not remember Paige Young but maybe he would later. I haven’t been able to reach him since the second phone call when he was unable to talk with me.

Richard shows me a picture of himself decked out head to toe in animal fur, looking like mountain man Jedidiah Smith.

Richard and his father were both quite handsome.

He says that “unfortunately” he has no photos of Paige or paintings by her; he has lost a lot of his possessions and paintings over the years but he is hoping to retrieve some of Paige’s paintings in Santa Maria.

“I never knew Paige to be involved with drugs, except an occasional use of grass.” Richard said that she did sometimes drink alcohol and occasionally “went to clubs in the Marina.”

Richard Sample

And possibly the Raincheck Room per Larry Bell’s quote. And definitely Barney’s Beanery.

1973 news clipping. Thank you Ellie Sample!

After I asked about something else and not hearing my question, Richard said “Paige was basically a very good person, until she got mixed up with Hefner. She went downhill then.”

Lewis Beach Marvin 3rd

was born into the family, “who owned Green Stamps. He was a friend of Paige’s and mine. He introduced me to Robert Carl Cohen who put a lot of my sculptures in his movie Mondo Hollywood.

Lewis Beach Marvin and the amazing dwelling he put together in the hills of Malibu, is featured in Mondo Hollywood. The movie is a cult film known as an important document of counterculture LA/1960s history.

I did some research and one story says that Lewis Beach Marvin is the young man who gives Jim Morrison a lamb on stage in Miami on May 1st 1969. This can be seen on a video. It’s the concert that resulted in Morrison’s arrest due to allegedly exposing his penis on stage.

Lewis Beach Marvin was a vegan activist WAY before it was a “thing.”

He does appear in a Miami article with a lamb around the time of the Doors concert.I have also read a local Miami man gave Morrison the lamb.

The Miami arrest hanging over his head is supposedly one reason Jim Morrison left for Paris where he fatally overdosed on heroin. He was already in bad health due to alcohol abuse.

Shortly after I returned from California, I rented Mondo Hollywood on Amazon.

I was unable to specifically identify Richard’s sculptures in the film–a sculptor named Valerie Porter is one of the “main characters” and the movie is heavy on a variety of her sculptures and many sculptures and structures.

I did see an ending credit:

Moonshadow sculpture: Richard Lauren Sample..

According to Richard:

Peter Gowland Playboy and Glamour Photographer

and Paige had met a few years before her appearance as a Playboy centerfold. Paige had already modeled for Gowland several times. This checks out with a few pre-centerfold photos of Paige taken by Gowland. These can be found on the internet.

Peter Gowland is the one who suggested and encouraged Paige to try out for Playboy; he submitted her photos as she recounted in 1969 to newspaper reporters.

I knew Paige mentioned in a few 1969 interviews that “my photographer friend suggested” the idea and he submitted her photos to Playboy. I did not previously mention this to Richard.

Gowland called Richard, in 1974, looking for Paige because he hadn’t heard from or seen her for a while. He called Richard back some time later to tell him that Paige had committed suicide. Peter did not tell Richard the method that Paige used to kill herself, Sample said to me.

Sample is quoted in Daily Mail story as saying he was told by Gowland that it was an overdose.

Clu00e9ment Proust on Pexels.com

Richard says he opened Eros Gallery in Westwood in the late 60s.

He can’t remember the location beyond that.

The next several photos are from Playboy magazine November 1968, taken by Peter Gowland.

Richard and I went through them .

Richard said this photo above shows him helping Paige carry one of her paintings into his Eros Gallery.

Playboy magazine November 1968. The gentleman pictured looks just like the man in the above photo helping Paige carry in one of her paintings.

Richard says the seated woman on the left is “Mrs. Burke, my partner in Eros Gallery.” Mrs. Burke was a local patroness of the Arts. He said that Peter Gowland is the man in between Mrs. Burke and Paige.

He may be mistaken, if it is Gowland, I don’t know who took the shot. Richard said Peter’s wife, who is the co-owner of their photography business, Alice Gowland was not there that day.

Richard said never met her.

According to Richard, this photo of Paige running with her dog Joshua was taken at the Malibu Colony.

Paige’s painting at right looks like the start of a self portrait. The nature of these photos is something you wouldn’t see in these centerfold features, after around 1973ish. After the “Pubic Wars” with Penthouse magazine, the Playmate feature in Playboy focused on lingerie or nudity in bedroom shots. There was much less content about a “regular girl hanging out with her friends” common in the 1950s and 1960s Playmates. Yes, The actual tri-fold centerfold was often a “bedroom shot” as it is with the Paige Young centerfold, but the other published photos of the Playmate feature were most often like the photo shown with Paige running along the beach with her dog Josh.

Richard said he has no idea who any of these people are at the cookout or in the room with Paige painting. He doesn’t recognize the location. These may or may not be real friends of Paige’s.

Sometimes young people were hired to stand in as “friends” for a Playboy centerfold shoot. Connie Kreski is one.

Richard said that when he was living with Paige he “never questioned where she was going, what she was doing” or with “whom she was doing it.”

“And she never questioned me. That is just the way the relationship was.”

Malibu fire

“Me and Harry Gesner went to Paige’s house during the Malibu fire (he’s not sure which year in the 1960s.) and hosed everything down. Paige’s house didn’t burn but everything around it did.”

I then asked a couple of questions about Paige’s family.

Was there ever an indication that Paige had grown up with a grandmother (Virginia Young LaRocca) who was a Christian Science practitioner/ 1st Reader in the Church for decades?

Richard answered, “Nope, nope, not at all.”

Richard said that Paige never talked about her childhood in the SFV. She never mentioned her family. He did not know that her birth name was Diana Cotterell or that she was married to Mark F. Segal. She never said she used Marvin Mitchelson as her lawyer, Richard had never heard of Mitchelson anyway.

Richard said he met Paige’s sister (Constance/Connie) one time only, when Paige drove him to a visit with her. He said he doesn’t “think that they had a close relationship.”

Richard looked quite exhausted so I ended the interview for the day. I felt bad about telling him too much of Paige’s background that he never knew.

He said it didn’t bother him.

He shared one last thing:

“I introduced Paige to Tony Dow, a good friend of mine. He drove a Porsche. He liked my Vette. He lived in the Valley. “

And Tony purchased some of Richard’s art .

Tony Dow died July 27, 2022, one month and 2 days after Harry Gesner‘s death.

Dow was 77 years old and experienced decades of pursuing his passion of creating sculpture. He had a long and happy 2nd marriage to Lauren.

From an interview with Richard: The Boise Weekly, where Richard was living Early 2007.

After parting ways with Maria Nicolosi, Sample married 1969 Playboy Playmate Paige Young who later died at her L.A home of a sleeping pill overdose. An artist in her own right, Young’s impressionistic portrait of Sample hangs in Gallery 8.

Sample was born on Friday the 13th of November 1936, a “triple Scorpio” by astrological accounts. “I have my Sun, Moon and Mercury in Scorpio,” he says, which may explain his resourcefulness and intensity. The legend of Scorpio tells of a scorpion sent by the immortal huntress Artemis to slay Orion, the great hunter. Scorpio, ever resourceful, fulfilled the deed for the goddess and was given a place in the night sky as his reward.

“I may not be a famous artist, but I am a successful one,” Sample said. And prolific. To date, he has completed and sold 2,761 paintings and is currently at work on six more.

The following is the Entire interview with Richard Sample when he still lived in Idaho and opened a gallery in a storage unit.

Just across the highway from the airport in Hailey, where Gulf Stream jets blast off regularly, lies the South Wood Self Storage Facility. Row upon row of identical containers are filled with furnishings and cargo, all except for locker No. 8, otherwise known as “Gallery 8,” a space used by artist Richard Lauran Sample. Above the door reads a sign: “Art Patrons Association of Idaho,” which Sample refers to as “a group dedicated to the arts, music and literature.” Just inside is the face of the Beatles’ Eleanor Rigby, “… wearing a face that she keeps in a jar by the door.” A cat named Turpentine studies the ghost-like face in a jar and then ranges freely through the menagerie of paintings and sculptures by Sample that fill Gallery 8: abstracts, Westerns and magical realism paintings, canvases of Batman and numerous other examples of skilled craftsmanship and determined artistic vision. There is an unfinished ivory-handled knife, a tidy collection of cobalt blue glassware and a series of clocks marking time at various Air Force bases across the United States, including Area 51. Gallery 8 is a long way from the Bel-Air, Calif., mansion Sample once called home.

Ever since Sample’s mother, Virginia, posed for the Columbia Pictures torch lady painting, Sample has lived in and around the glamour of Hollywood. During the 1960s, he was featured on several television shows, including the Jack Bailey show Queen for a Day, on which lucky American housewives were given makeovers and European vacations. “I sold 75 pieces from [the notoriety of] that show,” he recalls. Over the years, people like Raymond Burr, Edgar G. Robinson, and Tony Dow of Leave it to Beaver fame have purchased Sample’s work. “I traded one of my Castle paintings to Hollywood stunt man Charlie Wilcox—a family friend who worked on the movie Ben Hur and also did stunt work on The Creature from the Black Lagoon—for a small Picasso in the 1970s,” says Sample. “I should have held onto the Picasso.”

Today, Sample’s studio contains 108 paintings, all of which he has produced within the last year, while restoring antique oil paintings and repairing artwork in the Sun Valley area to make ends meet.

“I paint fast,” he says. “I’m an insomniac, so I rest. I don’t sleep. I’ll lie down on that couch there and have dreams and visions.” Like Salvador Dali, who also experimented with the state between wakefulness and dreaming, Sample creates surrealist landscapes. His are populated with the artifacts of his youth spent in the Ozark Mountains of Missouri, where he pumped water from a well and milked 13 cows each day before walking to school. For sustenance, he hunted and fished the nearby James River, named after Jesse James. During a stint as a ranger in the U.S. Army’s Third Missile Command, Sample was part of a three-man team that fired the 32-foot-long Honest John Rocket.

“It was fully manual'” he says. “We could hit a moving tank at 15 miles.” He also painted mess halls in the military.

Sample’s surrealism features whisky jugs and mushrooms, mechanical parts and hillside shacks. A recent work, “Lunar Reactor,” has taken hillbilly motifs and expanded them upon the cosmos. The oil painting shines under several coats of deep varnish that the artist has poured over sections of the piece. “When I am finished, there will be a three-dimensional effect. You will be able to see around the individual brush strokes.”

A similar fascination with technique developed some years ago into Sample’s black and white “Castle Paintings,” which he describes as “oil etchings.” These medieval ramparts above calm rivers are painted using brushes only a few hairs thick with paint strokes made in exactly five directions, similar to the etching procedure used in the production of the U.S. dollar bill.

Sample worked alongside his father at many trades during his youth: making trick poker tables, saddles, doing bronze work and cabinetry. The father and son also ran the West Coast Mint, pounding out thousands of custom bronze medallions under a 350-ton die press, including one of a farm field with a rocket ship commemorating the POMO Air Force Installation in California. They later built a bronze foundry in Pasa Robles from the ground up, which would reconstruct Remington sculptures to exact specifications. An accomplished gunsmith and saddle-maker, Charles Sample designed and built the spectacular silver saddles used in the Pasadena Rose Bowl New Year’s Day Parade. He also introduced his son to the magic and glamour of Hollywood.

“My father made a solid silver telephone and platinum garter clips for Mae West,” Sample says. “She tried to give him a Deusenberg, but he turned her down because the car didn’t have a spare tire.” Sample worked extensively for movie star Bo Derek and made gold leaf and wooden jewelry for Willem de Kooning’s wife, Elaine. De Kooning collected Sample’s work and corresponded with him for some time in letters. Sample keeps the correspondences in boxes with color snapshots and other personal memorabilia. One photo from 1973 was taken at the Marion Davies Mansion in Bel-Air. In it, Sample stands beside a gingerbread castle he made for the Christmas/birthday party of Charlton Heston.

“I put 7,000 pieces of candy in that cake,” he recalls. Nearby stands J. Paul Getty and Sample’s one-time paramour, Maria Nicolosi.

Sample reminisces about the life he shared with Nicolosi for seven years in the mansion, which was built by William Randolph Hearst for his lover, silent film star Marion Davies.

“The place was unbelievable,” he recalls. “It had every tropical tree you could imagine. They used to shoot Tarzan movies in the back yard. There were waterfalls and caves. The swimming pool was the largest in the United States and ran like a snake through the property. Vincent Price collected my paintings. He would stop in from across the street and have tea with us.”

According to Sample, the patriarch of the Nicolosi clan, sculptor Joseph Nicolosi, an artist of international significance, held a 50 percent interest in the Park Plaza Hotel in New York City. He had passed away before Sample took up residence in the mansion with his daughter.

After parting ways with Maria Nicolosi, Sample married 1969 Playboy Playmate Paige Young who later died at her L.A home of a sleeping pill overdose. An artist in her own right, Young’s impressionistic portrait of Sample hangs in Gallery 8. (Richard married Daryl if you remember, in 1968. The stayed married for a few years.)

Sample was born on Friday the 13th of November 1936, a “triple Scorpio” by astrological accounts. “I have my Sun, Moon and Mercury in Scorpio,” he says, which may explain his resourcefulness and intensity. The legend of Scorpio tells of a scorpion sent by the immortal huntress Artemis to slay Orion, the great hunter. Scorpio, ever resourceful, fulfilled the deed for the goddess and was given a place in the night sky as his reward.

“I may not be a famous artist, but I am a successful one,” Sample said. And prolific. To date, he has completed and sold 2,761 paintings and is currently at work on six more.

Sample also inherited a collection of books from his father published by the “photographer on horseback,” L.A. Huffman, who traveled the West in the 1870s. A book of glass plate prints and accompanying stories have provided the heart of Sample’s work for many years. He renders the photographs in sepia-toned oils. “There is a story behind every one of these paintings,” he points out. One is of a prairie Indian burial on stilts, entitled “Spirit Poles.” Another represents a self-portrait of Huffman, painted, as they all are, on maximum density particle board, which Sample says will never warp or bend. “These will last a thousand years,” he says. “You can wash them with soap and water.”

His decision to work in “permanence” came after working in the art of restoration at the L.A. County Art Museum, where several of his cardboard collages were hung in the 1960s.

“I’m self-taught,” he explains, while extolling the virtues of Ralph Mayer’s The Artist’s Handbook of Materials and Techniques.

“I have had three copies of this book over the years. It is the best book ever written for artists wanting to learn. It has taught me permanence. It continues to teach me the chemistry and permanence of paint,” he says.

Sample proudly displays a diploma for an Honorary Doctorate in the Arts from California’s Polytechnic State University, which he earned after completing a rigorous examination on his knowledge of things such as paint chemistry.

Yet Sample’s interests and talents range far beyond the fine arts and include herbology, anthropology, astrology and rock-collecting, to name a few. Against one wall, beside a tableau of religious icons and tribal mementos, is a case filled with meteorites.

Among the artifacts Sample has collected as an amateur archeologist are two nearly perfectly round black stones he found in a dried river bottom near Shoshone. He explains that the natives used them as weapons at one time, bound in hard leather at the end of a battle axe. Sample is incorporating each of the balls into meter-high white plaster abstract sculptures that will resonate with deep history and contemporary sculptural forms. “I also practice Tai Chi and read quantum physics,” he says, “including just about anything Albert Einstein wrote.”

Sample’s studies in physics pertain to certain technical projects he plans to undertake with the U.S. military, projects he would rather not discuss publicly. Relying on friends from NASA, he has plans to install a live video feed of nearby heavenly bodies to a televison set in his studio in the near future.

Even in Idaho, where he continues restoration, cabinetry and painting projects for actors Bruce Willis, John Larroquette and others, Sample still has the occasional brush with fame.

“One night at my brother Bill’s, Muffet Hemingway,” who is Margaux Hemingway’s sister, Joan, “came driving straight across the yard and right over the Christmas tree,” Sample says. “Muffet walked into the house and started munching on a crab leg, waved to herself in the glass window and then got into her car and drove away back across the yard. My brother came out and said, ‘Who’s the chick grazin’ in the kitchen?'”

Sample will auction off some of his work in spring of 2008 and give 15 percent of the proceeds to the Parkinson’s Foundation. “All of these 108 paintings will be sold in two days,” he says. “The last show I had, 1,500 people showed up at the Sage Brush Arena in Hailey. My place is always open to students and lovers of art,” he says.

1970/1 Paige At Pasadena Art Museum With Warhol Wearing A Rudi Gernreich Dress. Meet Paige’s Date Bill Gardner & Artist DeWain Valentine. Venice Beach Studio. Art Scene LA.(Long) *Updated* 3/8/25

Around May 15, 1970, An appearance by Paige Young at the Pasadena Art Museum (PAM) was recorded by Marvene Jones of the Los Angeles Evening News, and her photographer. Jones’ column, The Social Butterfly, Focused on hip happenings of the LA social set.

The occasion at PAM was a gala opening for the new Andy Warhol exhibit.

Warhol himself makes an appearance, obviously a big deal.

Los Angeles Evening Citizen 5/16/1970

Column #2 of article. Richard Sample told me Paige was always barefoot. (And frequently topless) Iconic 1960s fashion designer, from Los Angeles Rudi Gernreich, was the designer of Paige’s dress this evening.
Rudi Gernreich is famous for his aesthetic contributions to fashion in the 1960s.
Did Paige get the dress directly from Rudi? I think so. Paige Young and Rudi Gernreich lived or hung around Venice Beach at the time. Both were guests at Venice Beach artists’ openings. Rudi Gernreich was and is known for his innovative, modern, risque and gender-bending clothing. He is celebrated to this day for his impact on 1960s fashion and way beyond..
At the end of the article, Marvene Jones gossips that Paige removed her Gernreich dress in the VIP area, later in the evening.

Who is Bill Gardner? pictured with Paige.

From his own website:

William Louis Gardner

William Louis Gardner was born in Minnesota and finished school there. He
joined the US Air Force and worked at the Pentagon in the Target Library of the world. Went on to the Pasadena Playhouse to learn television and movie making. He got a job with actress Marion Davies at her home. There He met a movie agent and started a career in Hollywood. William Louis Gardner has worked in Hollywood as the agent, personal secretary, PR advisor and manager for for Mickey Rooney, Jonathan Winters, Jill St.John, Bobby Van and director, John Huston. William Gardner is the author of two books, “Confessions of a Hollywood Agent,” and “The Games End.”

Bill Gardner’s website
Paige’s date for the Warhol opening at PAM, Bill Gardner, is shown on the set of the Jonathan Winters Show 67-69 CBS. Gardner is with 2 men he “managed,” Mickey Rooney and Jonathan Winters. Paige Young said in 1969 interviews that she was an extra on the Jonathan Winters show and Playboy After Dark. Both shows were filmed at CBS Television City at 7800 Beverly Blvd. Marvene Jones wrote in the above article that Bill was Jonathan’s manager for a while. She also wrote that his main job was to keep Winters sober.

According to the Jones article column 2, Paige Young and Andy Warhol discuss a role for Paige in an upcoming Andy Warhol film.

It’s not something that ever happened. I think the two were making flirty small talk. Ironically, Paige mentions Warhol and the Pop Art scene in an interview with Playboy magazine.

She said about Pop Art “it gives me a headache.” And

“I wouldn’t waste my paint on it.”

Marvene Jones also says that Mr. and Mrs. DeWain Valentine made up a foursome that evening with Paige and Bill Gardner. Valentine had an exhibit showing some of his large cast polyester resin pieces at the Pasadena Art Museum. It was being shown along with the Warhol exhibit.

Notice in the Los Angeles Times
Last part of Marvene Jones’ column shows Warhol with locally famous art patrons Robert and Carolyn Rowan.

PAM has been called the Norton Simon Museum since October 1975. (An interesting LA story itself.) Classic Hollywood actress and widow of producer David Selznick, Jennifer Jones married Norton Simon, a very wealthy man. He took over the museum in the mid-1970s.

LA Times article 1970, about the upcoming Warhol Show.
Another article on the show.

DeWain Valentine, sculptor from Colorado, was a young and rising artist in the 1960s Venice Beach art scene.

Los Angeles Time March 10, 1968.

(Name misspelling of Warhol!) This refers to the exhibit Paige attended with Bill Gardner, DeWain Valentine and Mrs. Valentine. I interviewed Mrs. Darlene Valentine, who is referred to in the Marvene Jones article. She wasn’t sure if it was a planned foursome or if they just happened to be standing together. She did tell me that after her separation from DeWain, she felt pressured to attend some openings with her estranged husband. Some in the art world didn’t want a hint of scandal gossip at an important openings. They feared it could alienate potential buyers.

Valentine is considered one of the innovators of the “Light and Space” art movement. The others include Larry Bell, Robert Irwin, Helen Pashgian, James Turrell, John McCracken, Fred Eversley, and Doug Wheeler.

Many of these artists lived or rented a studio in Venice Beach due to the cheap rent. This was continuing a practice already established by this point in time.

From Pacific Standard Time exhibit website, 1968. DeWain Valentine in front of one of his works of art (or is it material for the artpiece?) in the Market St. studio where Paige Young also lived, or rented, at the time her Playboy issue was released.

brief Background of the Venice Beach Art scene:

End of sentence reads: “exoticism: and of course, it’s glorious beach.” From “Made in California: Art Image and Identity 1900-2000

Before the

Light and Space artists emerged in the 1960s, there was the Ferus Group. Named so because they exhibited at the Ferus Gallery, which opened in 1957.

From top right: Billy Al Bengston, Irving Blum, Ed Moses, John Altoon in front of the Ferus Gallery on La Cienega Blvd, in 1959. Photo from the book Pacific Standard Time, by William Claxton.

The Ferus Group includes California based artists: Ed Keinholz (original part-owner of the Gallery), Wally Berman, Billy Al Bengston, Ed Ruscha, Larry Bell, Robert Irwin, Ed Moses, Craig Kauffman, Ken Price and John Altoon.

Artists Jay DeFeo and Sonia Gechtoff from San Francisco.

Ferus Gallery included New York artists in their exhibits: Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, Roy Lichtenstein, Frank Stella.

The curators and owners of the Ferus Gallery who helped bring them to renown are Walter Hopps and Irving Blum.

end of sentence “directly onto sheetmetal.” From Made in California: Art, Image and Identity 1900-2000

Hopps had the eye for cutting edge art. Irving Blum was good at selling it.

Many of southern California artists lived in Venice Beach.

The Ferus Gallery gang interacted with Andy Warhol during his well documented stay in Los Angeles in the early 1960s. Warhol drove with actor Taylor Mead, assistant Gerard Malanga and painter Wynn Chamberlain from NYC to LA.

It was Warhol’s very first trip to LA.

Ken Price exhibition announcement from 1961, Ferus Gallery. From the book: Made in California: Art, Image and Identity.1900-2000

The trip plan was to catch opening night for Warhol’s 2nd exhibit at Ferus. His Campbell’s soup can collection has already shown there to jeers and laughter.

The Southern California artists were allowed to live and create far away from the competitive and critical Art world.

They found freedom to creativity outside of New York City.

Ed Moses once said “No one cared what we were doing.”

Alongside this growing art scene in Venice Beach in the 1950s and early 1960s, the “Beatnik Scene” was happening.

Author Lawrence Lipton documented and helped popularize Beats and Beatniks into a popular culture trope.

Lipton lived and observed the culture of people dropping out of the work-a-day world of post-war affluence.

They were moving away from the promotion of the so-called American Dream culture. This shift was noticeable in places like Venice West, California, North Beach, San Francisco, and Greenwich Village, NYC.

Lawrence Lipton wrote about the real life characters of the beatnik culture in his book Holy Barbarians.

Valley Times. November 7, 1959. The year that Holy Barbarians was published. Beatniks became a fad into the early 1960s and permanently after that..

The hotspots for Beats and Beatnik culture:

Venice Beach and Hermosa Beach communities in LA, North Beach in San Francisco and Greenwich Village in NYC.

Carolyn Keith on Pinterest.

Trope of a Beatnik Girl from the 1950s.

Here is an image of a Beatnik girl with many the cliches of Beatnik images in popular culture.

She has wine, cigarettes, a black beret, and black clothing.

Beatnik couple. Heidi Johnson pinterest. Beatnik accessories like bongo drums, wine, coffee, black striped t-shirts, Modern Art.

Beatnik culture featured in a late 1950s issue of Modern Man magazine. Modern Man was a “Bachelor” magazine and a competitor to Playboy magazine in the 1950s. KCET pinterest. Some of the 1950s pinup models were “Beatnik” in their philosophy about nudity. (Collette Berne)

Movies:

1959 Mr. Tucker, proprietor of a Los Angeles coffee house, hires three down-on-their-luck classic beatnik patrons. They are out-of-work actor John Mapes, struggling writer Ray Miller, and George Leland. George is the wayward son of movie star Rita Leland. They agree to participate in an armored car robbery. This occurs during a four-hour stopover in Chicago on the trio’s train trip from Los Angeles to New York. Mapes’ worried wife Jeanne joins him on the train, concerned about his not having had a job in more than a year. (wikipedia)

Disappointingly, The Rebel Set is not about Beatnik culture.

The film begins in a Beatnik coffeehouse with Beatnik patrons. Two of the patrons are struggling actors. They are recruited to join in an armored car heist in Chicago.

The group of Ferus artists were organizing as a Cultural force at the same time the Beatniks were becoming a pop culture force.

Over the next couple of years, Ruscha fell in with the artists orbiting the Ferus Gallery, which opened in 1957 on La Cienega Boulevard in West Hollywood. Founded by the curator Walter Hopps, his wife Shirley Hopps, and the artist Edward Kienholz, Ferus quickly became the ground zero of Los Angeles art, hosting exhibitions by Kienholz and a roster of talents that included John Altoon, Larry Bell, Billy Al Bengston, Robert Irwin, John McCracken, and Ed Moses, as well as Ruscha. Stylistically they were a diverse lot whose efforts ranged across figuration, Expressionism and Minimalist abstraction and this was no less true of Ruscha’s output, which ran the gamut from Pop Art to conceptualism. ART NEWS Nov. 2, 2023. Article about Ed Ruscha by Howard Halle.

The Ferus ‘Studs’ the new generation of artists, young abstract painters, ceramicists and assemblage makers who had been flying under the wire now were the featured artists at the Ferus Gallery. The Gallery was ripe for the adventurous artists who would set the new bar in contemporary styles. The Ferus Gallery had belief in the performance of their work and was one of the first galleries to support it.

Ferusgallery.com
Inside the Ferus Gallery, 1960.From left artists John Altoon, Billy Al Bengston with dancing owner and curator Irving Blum. Photo by William Claxton.

END

The Light and Space or Finish Fetish art movement was born in the mid-1960s.

DeWain Valentine was a key player along with Larry Bell, Doug Wheeler and Robert Irwin, Helen Pashigan, Peter Alexander and more.

Originally from Ft. Collins, Colorado, Valentine developed a type of polyester resin material. This material allowed him to make large scale pieces like the one shown below.

Previously, the material would crack when making a piece this size: approx: 17 1/4x 17/4 x 7/8.

(Christies Auction online)

Valentine was a newcomer to Venice Beach compared to the others artists, he arrived with his wife Darlene and sons in 1965.

He had been hired to teach a course on plastics at the UCLA Extension program.

From my reading, he experienced a rapid success on the West Coast.

For much more detail on these art movements which established the Los Angeles art scene as one on par with New York City or even Europe, watch the documentary “The Cool School, ” available on Netflix.

Richard Sample

Told me that after he moved to a studio-home in Venice (late 1960s), he invited Paige to live with him.

Richard’s father is artist and western jewelry maker, Charlie Sample. He was able to get Richard the studio space in Venice Beach.

I asked Richard the location and he said he could not remember it, but that it was quite close to the ocean and his artist neighbors and friends were, DeWain Valentine and Larry Bell. (See chapter: Interview with Richard Sample)

Valentine polyester resin discs from a newspaper article. This is what Paige and the attendees would have seen that night at the Pasadena Art Museum in 1970. But much more colorful like below!

Paige refers to her “new Venice art studio” and discusses the art scene there in several interviews with Playboy magazine and US newspapers in 1969 and 1970. (See chapter: Most Public Year 1969)

Richard Sample and Paige Young joined the community of Venice artists. They were “not working with the new materials,” to quote Paige in an interview. She was referring to her neighbors and friends, Valentine, Bell, Irwin, etc.

De Wain Valentine, Concave Circle Blue Green, 1968–2017. Cast polyester resin, 23 1/2 x 23 1/2 x 9 7/8 inches. © De Wain Valentine. Courtesy of the artist and Almine Rech. Photo: Melissa Castro Duarte. Brooklyn Rail.

Paige mentions her Venice Beach art studio in several articles including Playboy January 1969. So, it was not made up for publicity.
A female friend does remember Paige talking about her Venice art studio. For the most part, I have confirmed that Paige’s Playboy publicity about her personal life mostly aligned with the truth of her real life.
She did live in Malibu as her Playmate feature and interviews state. However, technically it was the southern end of Topanga Canyon near the beach across the Pacific Coast Highway. So Topanga Beach?

Paige mentions Venice Beach as an “art colony,” where she now lives.

Philadelphia Inquirer Jun. 27, 1969

I found the location of this Venice studio:62-68 Market St.

Research and interviews show that artist Robert Irwin lived across the street from Valentine. His name was not mentioned by Richard Sample.

At one point I asked Richard if he “knew Ed Ruscha or Robert Irwin” and some others. He did not recognize those names, he was certain about Larry Bell and DeWain Valentine.

Richard Sample’s niece Ellen Sample remembers visiting her uncle and grandfather Charles Sample at the art studio/home in Venice Beach. Charles Sample was a jewelry maker and had a retail storefront in addition to his studio.

Ellen, a child at the time, remembers hearing frequent talk about a man named “Valentine.”

Richard and Ellen both recalled being able to see the beach from the studio. 62-68 Market St., a block from the ocean, is a large structure. Many artists rented their own studios according to Ellie. This is why the address lists a range of numbers.

Richard Sample paints in Venice Beach. He was a friend and former lover of Paige. Richard left LA in the 1970s for Solvang and Los Alamos, Ca. eventually winding up in Idaho. Paige’s oil painting of Richard is hanging on the wall. To the upper left, we see some kind of Paige Playboy plaque. It looks like something the company would present to the Playmates.

Richard Sample is listed with an address of 63 Market St. Venice, in a newspaper marriage announcement, 1968.

Venice Evening Vanguard. Aug. 21 1968

Ellen texted me a story: she thinks her Uncle Richard sublet the Venice studio to Paige at one point.

Ellen recalls “tensions” about Paige among Ellen’s aunts.

These women were the wives of Charles Sample and his sons.

Ellen said her own mother was not bothered by Paige living at the studio. However, her mother did “go with her sister-in-laws to see what was going on at the studio.” Ellen says the most tense time was when Paige’s Playboy issue was current and shortly after. (This would have been November of 1968 and 1969. In 1969 Paige was frequently traveling all over the US to promote her photos published in a”current” issue of the magazine.

Richard Sample told me he was forced to ask Paige to leave the Venice studio because she never paid him rent. (See chapter Richard Sample interview)

I have learned that Paige was not a good manager of money.

I asked Ellen if it was a possibility that Richard felt pressured to ask Paige to leave due to the tension with the women in the family.

Ellen said she thought it was possible, but just didn’t know for certain.

DeWain Valentine has spoken about his Venice studio in several art magazine interviews and the influence it had on his art.

Mrs. Darlene Valentine told me in a telephone conversation that Paige was one of many women Valentine “slept with” or “dated” during those days.

She remembered the night at the Pasadena Art Museum, but not specifically that she double dated with Paige. She does remember that Warhol superstar Ultra Violet was along with Warhol.

She does not recall meeting Bill Gardner, Paige’s date of the evening.

DeWain Valentine fondly remembers the friendships with his many fellow artists. He had a special connection with Larry Bell and Robert Irwin. This was particularly true during the 1960s and early 70s.

Brooklyn Rail 2019

DeWain Valentine above states that he lived in and eventually purchased the 62 -65 Market St.

61-65 is the address listed here.

And indeed, several records with his signature and name can be seen in public building archives from LA County. They are now available online.

Here is how 62-68 Market St. looked in September of 2022. Sold by Valentine approx. 20 years ago. Bell’s former place is to the right with the red and cream bricks.

DeWayne Valentine spent many years living and creating art in Hawaii after the 1970s.

When he moved back to LA from Hawaii, it was to a large studio and home in Gardena.

.

From the Documentary “The Cool School.” Market St, where Valentine, Bell and Irwin, probably others, had art studios. Richard Sample and Paige Young made art and lived, briefly. Paige lived or rented the studio space for about one year. When she could not pay the rent for several months, Richard Sample “had no choice but to ask her to leave.” When he went to tell her this, Sample found her living on a houseboat in Marina del Rey.

The first white building facade you see in this clip was Valentine’s studio, where Paige and Sample lived and worked for a while in 68/69. The ocean can be seen from this location on Market St., just as Ellen and Richard Sample described it. Larry Bell lived next door and Robert Irwin lived across the street where the arches are on the left. (I think.)

From an 800-page + biography of Andy Warhol.

by author Blake Gopnik WARHOL, published in 2020, it is considered the definitive biography of Warhol according to “A.I.”
I have uploaded these paragraphs from the Warhol Biography describing the night Paige attended the Warhol opening at PAM, written up in the Social Butterfly column.
Notice the sentence “Specimen Days, a comedy about Walt Whitman’s time as a Civil War Nurse.”

<<<<<<<<<From the Marvene Jones column above. Andy’s new movie idea, Specimens of Man.

So DeWain Valentine and Ed Keinholz are chopped liver?