Mischa Richter

Deadheads and documentary lovers, tonight's the night for some dancing in the aisles at SF DocFest!It's Opening Night (Thursday, May 28th) and you are in for a real treat with "Summer Tour" screening at 6pm at Roxie Theater.
Nice to wake up this morning and see this on the front page of the Arts section of the San Francisco Chronicle.
Grab your tickets here:https://sfdocfest2026.eventive.org/schedule/69acf0c3ef6bcf4f4baee18b
“There has always been this incredible community around the band, it’s this traveling village of young people who’ve found a sense of belonging and acceptance.
Deadheads get a bad rap, like they’re just dirty barefoot stoners that are leaching off everyone,” said director Mischa Richter. By focusing on a summer journey through the eyes of one wholesome young couple, he wanted to show another way of being young and attuned to nature, not tech, in America today.He sees them as “a positive part of this tradition of the American quest, of hitting the road, and of equality and acceptance and adventure.”
And read this great story about the film in the San Francisco Chronicle here: https://www.sfchronicle.com/entertainment/movies-tv/article/summer-tour-deadheads-doc-22276892.php?utm_source=marketing&utm_medium=copy-url-link&utm_campaign=article-share&hash=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuc2ZjaHJvbmljbGUuY29tL2VudGVydGFpbm1lbnQvbW92aWVzLXR2L2FydGljbGUvc3VtbWVyLXRvdXItZGVhZGhlYWRzLWRvYy0yMjI3Njg5Mi5waHA%3D&time=MTc3OTg5Nzg4MDc3Ng%3D%3D&rid=MTVmMmYyZWMtNWNjYy00MWUzLTljZGQtMWY2YzJhOWQ2NWYw&sharecount=MQ%3D%3D
#GratefulDead #Deadhead #documentary #independentfilm #SFDocFest

Summer Tour ✌️ Brooklyn Bowl
Get tickets now for the NYC stop on the ☮️ Summer Tour Summer Tour ☮️
June 4 at Brooklyn Bowl 🎳
Featuring a live performance by Mason’s Children 💀
🎟 summertour.utopia.film
🎨 @cosmic.goof

Just Like New York City! I’m so excited and honored to be screening our film @summertourthefilm along with @masons.children at @brooklynbowl . I’ve had so many fun nights there shakin my bones and ready for another. Come on down y’all. Poster by @cosmic.goof 🎥💀❤️⚡️🕺🔥💃🏻

The ☮️ Summer Tour ✌️ Summer Tour ☮️ begins next Thursday, May 28 in Woodstock at the @bearsvilletheater featuring a live performance with @masons.children 💀
Get tickets 🌸 summertour.utopia.film
🎨 by Matt Lilly
Take a look at the trailer for The Summer Tour.
On the road starting May 28 in Woodstock, with screenings and live performances from @masons.children across the East Coast before expanding nationwide July 23.
🎟️ summertour.utopia.film (link in bio)

The Summer Tour Summer Tour starts May 28 in Woodstock followed by screenings and live performances with @masons.children all across the east coast through early July.
Expands nationwide July 23rd.
Get tickets now at summertour.utopia.film 🎟

Dead Night at Clem’s is Back!NFA @nycgratefuldeadfamily. Poster by #mattlilly. ❤️💀⚡️

Behold the official poster for SUMMER TOUR ✌️
Impeccably hand-drawn and colored by legendary artist David Welker, whose @welkerstudios work has defined a visual identity for a generation of jam bands, from #gratefuldead and #deadandcompany to #phish #pearljam #theblackkeys and more.
Tickets for the ☮️ Summer Tour Summer Tour ☮️ are now on sale 🎟 summertour.utopia.film

One of the great pleasures I’ve felt while film making is collaborating with other artist. Thank you @welkerstudios for working with us on Summer Tour and sharing your beautiful art. What an honor it is to have had you draw our official movie poster! I love you brother. 🙏🏻🎥💀❤️⚡️
Just some crazy kids on one of the last great American adventures 🛣️
This is SUMMER TOUR, @mischarichter’s love letter to generations of #deadhead culture. Produced by @chloessevigny ✨
The ☮️ Summer Tour Summer Tour ☮️ begins May 28 in Woodstock followed by screenings + live performances with @masons.children all across the east coast through early July.
Expands nationwide July 23 ✌️
Get tickets now at summertour.utopia.film 🎟

Announcing the East Coast leg of the SUMMER TOUR Summer Tour 💀
Special event screenings featuring performances by @masons.children, a psychedelic musical explosion of the undying love that exists for the Grateful Dead ☮️
Get tickets now at summertour.utopia.film 🎟

Early this year, I had the pleasure of photographing the interiors of @mischarichter’s beautiful home for the spring issue of Beach House, the annual magazine published by @provincetownindependent. Misha is an inspiring photographer and filmmaker based in Provincetown. “We all decorate our places with art and memorabilia, but Mischa’s house transcends the decorative aspect. Although it serves as a space to live, work, and entertain in, it is itself, in every detail, a work of art. Wherever your glance falls, there is intentional beauty, something built there or placed there for the eye to see and for the viewer to ponder and appreciate.
Every piece “means something to me,” he says. The materials come from not only his own past but the town’s: reclaimed artifacts from the old Flagship Restaurant, Phyllis and Izzy Sklar’s jewelry shop, Joe Notaro’s house on Bradford Street, the Provincetown Inn’s bowling alleys. His grandparents’ old house on the water is well represented with old doors and cupboards, and Mischa Senior’s paint-splattered studio floor has become a wall in his bedroom. He uses his grandfather’s old light table for his own photographic work. Of course John Eder’s house, lost to a fire in 2019, supplies an abundance of materials- posts and signs and shingles almost bring the recluse back to life.
In the glorious light-filled sunroom, there is stained glass and old wood, shells and ancient bottles, bones and antlers, dried flowers, and a slightly charred Buddha. The central fireplace, composed of weathered brick and stone and ship’s ribs, seems to almost swirl and sway in its space.
It is a happy place to be.” Writes @dennisminsky #interiorphotography #artobjects

Early this year, I had the pleasure of photographing the interiors of @mischarichter’s beautiful home for the spring issue of Beach House, the annual magazine published by @provincetownindependent. Misha is an inspiring photographer and filmmaker based in Provincetown. “We all decorate our places with art and memorabilia, but Mischa’s house transcends the decorative aspect. Although it serves as a space to live, work, and entertain in, it is itself, in every detail, a work of art. Wherever your glance falls, there is intentional beauty, something built there or placed there for the eye to see and for the viewer to ponder and appreciate.
Every piece “means something to me,” he says. The materials come from not only his own past but the town’s: reclaimed artifacts from the old Flagship Restaurant, Phyllis and Izzy Sklar’s jewelry shop, Joe Notaro’s house on Bradford Street, the Provincetown Inn’s bowling alleys. His grandparents’ old house on the water is well represented with old doors and cupboards, and Mischa Senior’s paint-splattered studio floor has become a wall in his bedroom. He uses his grandfather’s old light table for his own photographic work. Of course John Eder’s house, lost to a fire in 2019, supplies an abundance of materials- posts and signs and shingles almost bring the recluse back to life.
In the glorious light-filled sunroom, there is stained glass and old wood, shells and ancient bottles, bones and antlers, dried flowers, and a slightly charred Buddha. The central fireplace, composed of weathered brick and stone and ship’s ribs, seems to almost swirl and sway in its space.
It is a happy place to be.” Writes @dennisminsky #interiorphotography #artobjects

Early this year, I had the pleasure of photographing the interiors of @mischarichter’s beautiful home for the spring issue of Beach House, the annual magazine published by @provincetownindependent. Misha is an inspiring photographer and filmmaker based in Provincetown. “We all decorate our places with art and memorabilia, but Mischa’s house transcends the decorative aspect. Although it serves as a space to live, work, and entertain in, it is itself, in every detail, a work of art. Wherever your glance falls, there is intentional beauty, something built there or placed there for the eye to see and for the viewer to ponder and appreciate.
Every piece “means something to me,” he says. The materials come from not only his own past but the town’s: reclaimed artifacts from the old Flagship Restaurant, Phyllis and Izzy Sklar’s jewelry shop, Joe Notaro’s house on Bradford Street, the Provincetown Inn’s bowling alleys. His grandparents’ old house on the water is well represented with old doors and cupboards, and Mischa Senior’s paint-splattered studio floor has become a wall in his bedroom. He uses his grandfather’s old light table for his own photographic work. Of course John Eder’s house, lost to a fire in 2019, supplies an abundance of materials- posts and signs and shingles almost bring the recluse back to life.
In the glorious light-filled sunroom, there is stained glass and old wood, shells and ancient bottles, bones and antlers, dried flowers, and a slightly charred Buddha. The central fireplace, composed of weathered brick and stone and ship’s ribs, seems to almost swirl and sway in its space.
It is a happy place to be.” Writes @dennisminsky #interiorphotography #artobjects

Early this year, I had the pleasure of photographing the interiors of @mischarichter’s beautiful home for the spring issue of Beach House, the annual magazine published by @provincetownindependent. Misha is an inspiring photographer and filmmaker based in Provincetown. “We all decorate our places with art and memorabilia, but Mischa’s house transcends the decorative aspect. Although it serves as a space to live, work, and entertain in, it is itself, in every detail, a work of art. Wherever your glance falls, there is intentional beauty, something built there or placed there for the eye to see and for the viewer to ponder and appreciate.
Every piece “means something to me,” he says. The materials come from not only his own past but the town’s: reclaimed artifacts from the old Flagship Restaurant, Phyllis and Izzy Sklar’s jewelry shop, Joe Notaro’s house on Bradford Street, the Provincetown Inn’s bowling alleys. His grandparents’ old house on the water is well represented with old doors and cupboards, and Mischa Senior’s paint-splattered studio floor has become a wall in his bedroom. He uses his grandfather’s old light table for his own photographic work. Of course John Eder’s house, lost to a fire in 2019, supplies an abundance of materials- posts and signs and shingles almost bring the recluse back to life.
In the glorious light-filled sunroom, there is stained glass and old wood, shells and ancient bottles, bones and antlers, dried flowers, and a slightly charred Buddha. The central fireplace, composed of weathered brick and stone and ship’s ribs, seems to almost swirl and sway in its space.
It is a happy place to be.” Writes @dennisminsky #interiorphotography #artobjects

Early this year, I had the pleasure of photographing the interiors of @mischarichter’s beautiful home for the spring issue of Beach House, the annual magazine published by @provincetownindependent. Misha is an inspiring photographer and filmmaker based in Provincetown. “We all decorate our places with art and memorabilia, but Mischa’s house transcends the decorative aspect. Although it serves as a space to live, work, and entertain in, it is itself, in every detail, a work of art. Wherever your glance falls, there is intentional beauty, something built there or placed there for the eye to see and for the viewer to ponder and appreciate.
Every piece “means something to me,” he says. The materials come from not only his own past but the town’s: reclaimed artifacts from the old Flagship Restaurant, Phyllis and Izzy Sklar’s jewelry shop, Joe Notaro’s house on Bradford Street, the Provincetown Inn’s bowling alleys. His grandparents’ old house on the water is well represented with old doors and cupboards, and Mischa Senior’s paint-splattered studio floor has become a wall in his bedroom. He uses his grandfather’s old light table for his own photographic work. Of course John Eder’s house, lost to a fire in 2019, supplies an abundance of materials- posts and signs and shingles almost bring the recluse back to life.
In the glorious light-filled sunroom, there is stained glass and old wood, shells and ancient bottles, bones and antlers, dried flowers, and a slightly charred Buddha. The central fireplace, composed of weathered brick and stone and ship’s ribs, seems to almost swirl and sway in its space.
It is a happy place to be.” Writes @dennisminsky #interiorphotography #artobjects

Early this year, I had the pleasure of photographing the interiors of @mischarichter’s beautiful home for the spring issue of Beach House, the annual magazine published by @provincetownindependent. Misha is an inspiring photographer and filmmaker based in Provincetown. “We all decorate our places with art and memorabilia, but Mischa’s house transcends the decorative aspect. Although it serves as a space to live, work, and entertain in, it is itself, in every detail, a work of art. Wherever your glance falls, there is intentional beauty, something built there or placed there for the eye to see and for the viewer to ponder and appreciate.
Every piece “means something to me,” he says. The materials come from not only his own past but the town’s: reclaimed artifacts from the old Flagship Restaurant, Phyllis and Izzy Sklar’s jewelry shop, Joe Notaro’s house on Bradford Street, the Provincetown Inn’s bowling alleys. His grandparents’ old house on the water is well represented with old doors and cupboards, and Mischa Senior’s paint-splattered studio floor has become a wall in his bedroom. He uses his grandfather’s old light table for his own photographic work. Of course John Eder’s house, lost to a fire in 2019, supplies an abundance of materials- posts and signs and shingles almost bring the recluse back to life.
In the glorious light-filled sunroom, there is stained glass and old wood, shells and ancient bottles, bones and antlers, dried flowers, and a slightly charred Buddha. The central fireplace, composed of weathered brick and stone and ship’s ribs, seems to almost swirl and sway in its space.
It is a happy place to be.” Writes @dennisminsky #interiorphotography #artobjects

Early this year, I had the pleasure of photographing the interiors of @mischarichter’s beautiful home for the spring issue of Beach House, the annual magazine published by @provincetownindependent. Misha is an inspiring photographer and filmmaker based in Provincetown. “We all decorate our places with art and memorabilia, but Mischa’s house transcends the decorative aspect. Although it serves as a space to live, work, and entertain in, it is itself, in every detail, a work of art. Wherever your glance falls, there is intentional beauty, something built there or placed there for the eye to see and for the viewer to ponder and appreciate.
Every piece “means something to me,” he says. The materials come from not only his own past but the town’s: reclaimed artifacts from the old Flagship Restaurant, Phyllis and Izzy Sklar’s jewelry shop, Joe Notaro’s house on Bradford Street, the Provincetown Inn’s bowling alleys. His grandparents’ old house on the water is well represented with old doors and cupboards, and Mischa Senior’s paint-splattered studio floor has become a wall in his bedroom. He uses his grandfather’s old light table for his own photographic work. Of course John Eder’s house, lost to a fire in 2019, supplies an abundance of materials- posts and signs and shingles almost bring the recluse back to life.
In the glorious light-filled sunroom, there is stained glass and old wood, shells and ancient bottles, bones and antlers, dried flowers, and a slightly charred Buddha. The central fireplace, composed of weathered brick and stone and ship’s ribs, seems to almost swirl and sway in its space.
It is a happy place to be.” Writes @dennisminsky #interiorphotography #artobjects

Early this year, I had the pleasure of photographing the interiors of @mischarichter’s beautiful home for the spring issue of Beach House, the annual magazine published by @provincetownindependent. Misha is an inspiring photographer and filmmaker based in Provincetown. “We all decorate our places with art and memorabilia, but Mischa’s house transcends the decorative aspect. Although it serves as a space to live, work, and entertain in, it is itself, in every detail, a work of art. Wherever your glance falls, there is intentional beauty, something built there or placed there for the eye to see and for the viewer to ponder and appreciate.
Every piece “means something to me,” he says. The materials come from not only his own past but the town’s: reclaimed artifacts from the old Flagship Restaurant, Phyllis and Izzy Sklar’s jewelry shop, Joe Notaro’s house on Bradford Street, the Provincetown Inn’s bowling alleys. His grandparents’ old house on the water is well represented with old doors and cupboards, and Mischa Senior’s paint-splattered studio floor has become a wall in his bedroom. He uses his grandfather’s old light table for his own photographic work. Of course John Eder’s house, lost to a fire in 2019, supplies an abundance of materials- posts and signs and shingles almost bring the recluse back to life.
In the glorious light-filled sunroom, there is stained glass and old wood, shells and ancient bottles, bones and antlers, dried flowers, and a slightly charred Buddha. The central fireplace, composed of weathered brick and stone and ship’s ribs, seems to almost swirl and sway in its space.
It is a happy place to be.” Writes @dennisminsky #interiorphotography #artobjects

Early this year, I had the pleasure of photographing the interiors of @mischarichter’s beautiful home for the spring issue of Beach House, the annual magazine published by @provincetownindependent. Misha is an inspiring photographer and filmmaker based in Provincetown. “We all decorate our places with art and memorabilia, but Mischa’s house transcends the decorative aspect. Although it serves as a space to live, work, and entertain in, it is itself, in every detail, a work of art. Wherever your glance falls, there is intentional beauty, something built there or placed there for the eye to see and for the viewer to ponder and appreciate.
Every piece “means something to me,” he says. The materials come from not only his own past but the town’s: reclaimed artifacts from the old Flagship Restaurant, Phyllis and Izzy Sklar’s jewelry shop, Joe Notaro’s house on Bradford Street, the Provincetown Inn’s bowling alleys. His grandparents’ old house on the water is well represented with old doors and cupboards, and Mischa Senior’s paint-splattered studio floor has become a wall in his bedroom. He uses his grandfather’s old light table for his own photographic work. Of course John Eder’s house, lost to a fire in 2019, supplies an abundance of materials- posts and signs and shingles almost bring the recluse back to life.
In the glorious light-filled sunroom, there is stained glass and old wood, shells and ancient bottles, bones and antlers, dried flowers, and a slightly charred Buddha. The central fireplace, composed of weathered brick and stone and ship’s ribs, seems to almost swirl and sway in its space.
It is a happy place to be.” Writes @dennisminsky #interiorphotography #artobjects
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