A reluctant icon captures a decade of cultural transformation. During the 1960s, Dennis Hopper carried a camera everywhere: on film sets and locations, at parties, in diners, bars and galleries, driving on freeways and walking on political marches.
He photographed movie idols, pop stars, writers, artists, girlfriends, and complete strangers. Along the way he captured some of the most intriguing moments of his generation with a keen and intuitive eye.
A reluctant icon at the epicenter of that decades cultural upheaval, Hopper documented the likes of Tina Turner in the studio, Andy Warhol at his first West Coast show, Paul Newman on set, and Martin Luther King during the Civil Rights March from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama. From a selection of photographs compiled by Hopper and gallerist Tony Shafrazi, more than a third of them previously unpublished, this extensive volume distills the essence of Hopper's brilliantly prodigious photographic career. 11.5 x 2 x 13 inches, 544 pages.
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