The Lost Album. The exhibition presents both a personal visual diary and a document of America's dynamic social and cultural life in the 1960s. The photographs move between humour and pathos, the playful and the intimate, the glamorous and the everyday. They are considered spontaneous, poetic, as well as political and sharply observant.
Dennis Hopper: The Lost Album at the Royal Academy of Arts will present more than four hundred
original photographs taken between 1961 and 1967 by Dennis Hopper, the American actor, film
director and artist. The photographs were personally selected and edited by Hopper for his first major
exhibition at the Fort Worth Art Center in Texas in 1970, and the vintage prints were only re-
discovered after his death in 2010. This will be the first time that this body of work will be seen in the
UK.
Although not formally trained as an artist, Dennis Hopper created paintings and assemblages
throughout his career and during the 1960s dedicated himself to taking photographs with a Nikon F
camera with a 28mm lens given to him by his future wife Brooke Hayward. According to Hopper, his
interest in photography began in the late 1950s under the encouragement of James Dean, whom he
had worked with on the set of Rebel without a Cause (1955) and Giant (1956). After living in New
York from c.1957-1961, Hopper returned to Los Angeles where he found himself blacklisted in
Hollywood and photography became Hopper’s main creative outlet. For the next six years he worked
obsessively, taking an estimated 18,000 photographs.
Dennis Hopper: The Lost Album presents both a personal visual diary and a document of
America’s dynamic social and cultural life in the 1960s. The photographs move between humour and
pathos, the playful and the intimate, the glamorous and the everyday. They are considered
spontaneous, poetic, as well as political and sharply observant. Whether Dennis Hopper was in Los
Angeles, New York, London, Mexico or Peru, he was interested in a vast range of themes and
subjects. The influential American curator Walter Hopps described his photographs as “small movies,
still photographs made on the sets and locations of imagined films in progress.”
Hopper took iconic portraits of Paul Newman, Robert Rauschenberg, Andy Warhol, Jane Fonda and
many other actors, artists, poets and musicians of his day. He photographed his family and friends
and captured countercultural movements that ranged from Free Speech to Hells Angels and Hippie
gatherings, taking in figures from the Beat and Peace movements such as Michael McLure and
Timothy Leary. These often playful photographs were counterbalanced by images of tense and
volatile events, such as the 1965 march from Selma to Montgomery at the height of the African-
American Civil Rights Movement, where he accompanied Martin Luther King. About his photographs,Hopper said “I wanted to document something. I wanted to leave something that I thought would be a
record of it, whether it was Martin Luther King, the hippies, or whether it was the artist.”
Both his photography and his growing contemporary art collection led Hopper to be associated with
the Los Angeles art world. Hopper and his artist friends Ed Ruscha, Wallace Berman, Larry Bell and
Edward Kienholz gravitated to the influential Ferus Gallery in Los Angeles. Throughout the 1960s the
gallery hosted a series of exhibitions that came to define the nascent West Coast art scene, while
also introducing Los Angeles audiences to the work of East coast Pop artists like Jasper Johns,
Rauschenberg and Warhol. Hopper’s photographs of artists, events, happenings and performances
are unique in their intimacy and range of cultural subjects and acted as an important link between the
film and art worlds.
When Hopper began to work on the film Easy Rider in 1967 he stopped taking photographs, although
he continued to work across the spectrum of visual arts. However, the vitality and directness of the
images taken from 1961-67 and the sense of time and place that they convey during a decade when
American society was undergoing extraordinary upheaval, resonated strongly with cultural production
of the period. They certainly informed the visual language of Easy Rider (1969), whose emphasis on
realism and a youth-oriented counterculture, signalled the arrival of the New Hollywood Cinema of
the 1970s. Excerpts from the film will also be showing within the exhibition, along with The Last
Movie (1970).
Hopper’s on-screen performances in films such as Apocalypse Now (1979), Out of the Blue (1980),
Blue Velvet (1986) and Colors (1988), as well as his off screen life and persona, made him one of the
figures most closely associated with the achievements and failures, as well as the rebellious spirit of
the counterculture of the 1960s.
About the photographs
The gelatin-silver vintage prints, both portrait and landscape formats, all have similar dimensions,
approx. 24.1 x 16.5 cm (9.5 x 6.5 in.). They also include twenty large-format prints measuring
approx. 33 x 22.9 cm (13 x 9 in.). The photographs are mounted onto cardboard and considering
they lay undiscovered for thirty years, are in very good condition.
Organisation
Dennis Hopper: The Lost Album has been organised by the Royal Academy of Arts, London in
cooperation with The Dennis Hopper Art Trust. The exhibition is curated by Petra Giloy-Hirtz,
independent Curator.
Publication available in the RA Shop
To coincide with the exhibition Prestel have published Dennis Hopper: The Lost Album by Petra
Giloy-Hirtz (Hardback £35). With close to six hundred illustrations and contributions from Dennis
Hopper and Brooke Hayward, the volume presents the most comprehensive account of Hopper’s
photography from 1961-67. For further information about the book please contact Inge Kunzelmann
at Prestel: ikunzelmann@prestel-uk.co.uk 020 7323 5004 www.prestel.com
Image: Dennis Hopper Paul Newman 1964. Photograph 16.64 x 25.02 cm The Hopper Art Trust. © Dennis Hopper, courtesy The Hopper Art Trust.
For further press information, please contact Alexandra Bradley at the Royal Academy of Arts
Press Office on 020 7300 5615 or press.office@royalacademy.org.uk
Royal Academy of Arts
Burlington House, Piccadilly - London W1J 0BD
10am – 6pm daily (last admission 5.30pm)
Fridays until 10pm (last admission 9.30pm)
Admission
£10 full price; concessions available; children under 12 free; Friends of the RA go free