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Wasserman would build two more hot rods over the years -- a highly modified '34 three-window coupe and a red '34 roadster which he calls his "very favorite car in the entire world." He also bought an immaculate, stock '34 Deluxe Tudor sedan with 26,000 miles on it, a '65 Malibu SS and his daily driver is a '65 Chevelle two-door wagon.
Despite the fact that he had built and owned so many other cool cars, he missed The Insult like a long-lost child. "The car was gone and it drove me crazy," says Wasserman, "I had nightmares about it. I regret the day I ever sold that car. I had to have it back."
After years of being out of his possession, Wasserman saw The Insult at a Throttlers picnic--and it was for sale! It had been modified to some extent. Its silver, blue and green flames had been painted with yellow and red flames and some more pinstriping had been done on it. Almost 60 lbs. of polished brass and stainless steel had been added. But it was still The Insult, the first hot rod he had ever built.
Unfortunately, Wasserman and the new owner could not agree on a price. The Insult wound up being sold to someone else and Wasserman had no idea of its whereabouts. Amazingly, two years later, he saw the car at another picnic, sitting under a tree. He waited by the car until the owner showed up. Wasserman explained the history of the car and said he wanted to buy the car back. The owner took his information and said if he ever wanted to sell it, he'd give him a call.
In 1996, the owner called Wasserman and sold The Insult back to him. On his way to bring The Insult back home, something seemed wrong with the car and Wasserman chose to take surface streets instead of the freeway. He didn't get more than a few blocks when a front wheel bearing seized up and the car had to be brought the rest of the way home on a flatbed. Wasserman insists that the car would have flipped over and killed him if the bearing had locked up at freeway speed. "Now the car is right where it belongs," he says, "In my little garage."
Although Wasserman jokingly calls his obsession with cars "a serious sickness," it can't be all bad. His love for hot rods made him many life-long friends and helped him start his own business in a roundabout way. While in college, Wasserman saw guys making money doing flaming and striping on cars in parking lots and simply thought that would be a "really neat way to make money."
He started doing lettering on race cars for extra cash. Then he got some office space from a friend for $30 a month and opened his own sign painting business. Someone came in and asked if he did silkscreen printing for t-shirts. "Sure," he replied confidently. He took half of the man's money as a down payment on the job, despite the fact that he didn't actually know the first thing about screen printing. He figured out what he needed to know about silkscreening from a clerk at the art supply store where he went to buy the screens for the job. The order was filled and Wasserman was on his way to opening his own screen printing business.
In 1967, a fine art printing shop out-sourced some of the printing for a Robert Rauschenberg print to Wasserman. Later, he worked on two runs of prints by Roy Lichtenstein. From 1970 through 1975, he closed up his own shop and went to work for the company that had out-sourced him the Rauschenberg jobs. For those five years, Wasserman printed blue chip art, including works by Andy Warhol and Frank Stella. One Stella job, Double Gray Scramble, consisted of 150 colors. It took three years to proof and seven months to print. Wasserman had come a long way from bluffing his way through his first t-shirt printing job.
In 1976, he reopened Wasserman Screen Printing in Santa Monica. Since that time, he has done fine art printing for everyone from the likes of uptown artists Ed Ruscha and Patrick Nagel to lowbrow kingpins Ed Roth and Robert Williams.
Just as being around cars originally led Wasserman to open his fine art printing business, his art printing is leading back to being around cars. He has plans to divide the shop of Wasserman Screen Printing in half. He wants to make part of it into a garage where he will do traditional automotive upholstery, flaming and pinstriping.
When asked if this new business venture is basically an excuse to buy a lift, Wasserman frankly replies, "Yes."
Today, Wasserman belongs to the "Old Timers" car club. There's no president, no treasurer and no dues. "It's just the same old guys sitting around a parking lot telling the same lies they've been telling for years," says Wasserman. "I work on cars because I like it. I make art for other people during the day. When I come home, I make these cars for myself. I'm not a mechanic. I only know my own cars and that's all I'm really interested in."
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