Book
Dennis Hopper
The Lost Album

Martin Luther King, Jr., 1965 Location: Montgomery, Alabama, USA © The Dennis Hopper Trust Courtesy of The Dennis Hopper Trust

Andy Warhol, Henry Geldzahler, David Hockney, and Jeff Goodman, 1963 Location: USA © The Dennis Hopper Trust Courtesy of The Dennis Hopper Trust

Guy With 5 Hogs, 1961-67 Location: USA © The Dennis Hopper Trust Courtesy of The Dennis Hopper Trust

Paul Newman, 1964 Location: Malibu, Ca USA © The Dennis Hopper Trust Courtesy of The Dennis Hopper Trust

James Brown, 1966 Location: USA © The Dennis Hopper Trust Courtesy of The Dennis Hopper Trust

Boy Walking in Mexico, 1961- 67 Location: Mexico © The Dennis Hopper Trust Courtesy of The Dennis Hopper Trust

James Rosenquist, 1964 Location: Billboard Factory, Los Angeles, Ca USA © The Dennis Hopper Trust Courtesy of The Dennis Hopper Trust

Niki de Saint Phalle (kneeling), 1963 Location: USA © The Dennis Hopper Trust Courtesy of The Dennis Hopper Trust

Andy Warhol and Members of The Factory (Gregory Markopoulos, Taylor Mead, Gerard Malanga, Jack Smith), 1963 Location: in The Factory, NYC, NY USA © The Dennis Hopper Trust Courtesy of The Dennis Hopper Trust

Double Standard, 1961 Location: Los Angeles, Ca USA © The Dennis Hopper Trust Courtesy of The Dennis Hopper Trust
Martin Luther King, Jr., 1965 Location: Montgomery, Alabama, USA © The Dennis Hopper Trust Courtesy of The Dennis Hopper Trust
The collection of four hundred vintage prints from the 1960s — taken by Dennis Hopper and recently rediscovered — documents the social, political, and creative highlights from a tumultuous era.
Lying hidden away in Dennis Hopper’s home until their discovery months after the artist’s death in 2010, this collection of spectacular photographs, exhibited only once in 1969–70 at the Fort Worth Art Center Museum, is a testament to Hopper’s prolific and enormous talent behind the camera. These photographs are spontaneous, intimate, poetic, observant, and decidedly political. While some are portraits of figures within Hopper’s circle of actor, artist, musician, and poet friends — including Jane Fonda, Paul Newman, and Robert Rauschenberg — they also include images from his extensive travels in Los Angeles, New York, London, Mexico, and Peru. Hopper’s abiding support of the Civil Rights movement and social justice is evident in his shots from the march on Selma and Harlem street scenes. In images of beauty and stillness he transfers Abstract Expressionism into the artistic language of photography. Throughout this stunning volume Hopper’s sensitive, keenly observant eye shines through, making it clear that he was a deeply committed chronicler of the events that were unfolding around him.
Dennis Hopper: The Lost Album
Prestel Editor
Vintage Prints from the Sixties
244 pages, 25 x 30 cm
583 b/w illustrations
ISBN: 978-3-7913-5245-9
Exhibition :
Dennis Hopper – The Lost Album
Du 20 septembre au 17 décembre 2012
Martin-Gropius-Bau
Niederkirchnerstraße 7
10963 Berlin, Allemagne
US$ 60.00 | GBP 35.00 | 50 €
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Contributors
Laurence Cornet
