Photographer Roger Steffens, who has just published an incredible book of his photographs documenting the 60s, speaks with Henry Hopper about The Family Acid. photograph by Oliver Maxwell Kupper
Dennis Hopper's The Lost Album @ Martin-Gropius-Bau in Berlin
Henry Hopper standing in front of a photograph by his late father, the actor Dennis Hopper's retrospective of over 400 "lost" photographs on view now at Martin-Gropius-Bau in Berlin until December 17th, 2012. photographs by Adarsha Benjamin
Dennis Hopper's Lost Album on View @ Martin-Gropius-Bau
On view at Martin-Gropius-Bau Museum are an impressive four hundred vintage photographs taken by Dennis Hopper in the 1960s. Tucked away in five crates and forgotten, they were discovered after his death.Many of these pictures are icons, such as the portraits of Robert Rauschenberg, Andy Warhol, Paul Newman and Jane Fonda. They also cover a wide range of subjects. Dennis Hopper is interested in everything. Wherever he happens to be, whether in Los Angeles, New York, London, Mexico or Peru, he takes in his surroundings with empathy, enthusiasm and intense curiosity. He seeks and savours the “essential moment”, capturing the celebrities and types of his time with the camera: actors, artists, musicians, his family, Hell’s Angels and hippies. He leaves an impressive photographic record of the “street life” of Harlem, of cemeteries in Mexico, and of bullfights in Tijuana. Hopper accompanies Martin Luther King on the march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama. Dennis Hopper: Lost Album is on view until December 17, 2012 at Martin-Gropius-Bau, Niederkirchner Straße 7, 10963 Berlin, Germany