Serial Killer Art
Collectors

Louisiana mortician Rick Stanton is one of the “collectors,” and he’s made a name from his active encouragement of incarcerated serial killers to produce pieces that he could sell. He developed three successful “Death Row Art Shows” for such exhibitors as Henley and Henry Lee Lucas, and had a mailing list of several hundred interested parties. He found some of the killers obnoxious, though he did send a photo of his son to John Wayne Gacy to do a painting. Admittedly, serial killers fascinate him. He acquired pieces from Richard Speck, Ottis Toole, Lucas, Gacy, Manson, and Henley, which he considered the best. His companion and business partner, Tobias Allen, developed a serial killer board game, which has been banned in Canada. In a real life rendition of Kalifornia, these two were featured in the documentary collecting items from infamous crime scenes, such as a brick from the home where Sharon Tate was murdered.

“That’s the stuff I can relate to and understand,” he says about outsider art. “Because that’s the stuff where the feelings are everything, where the person is everything... They’re not concerned with trends, or with sales in the art world, or making a sophisticated statement in our history... They’re desperate to put these things down on paper.”
Now a cult figure himself, Coleman appreciates controversy and searches continuously for the sordid dimension of American society: an 11-year-old female psychopath who killed two boys; a self-flagellating man who raped children and stuck needles into his groin; a self-appointed prophet who sent his disciples out to slaughter “whitey.” These are Americans, too, Coleman seems to say, and he’s willing to explore what it means and offer that to others, even at the expense of being reviled.
































