By now, many of you are familiar with the Taschen program of releasing certain titles in a large format, limited edition, only to follow on with a slightly smaller format version of the same title at a greatly reduced price, perhaps a year (or in the case of Helmut Newton's "Sumo," ten years) later. Such is the case with three new popularly priced releases from the art book house.
From the time he shared the screen with James Dean in the seminal films "Rebel Without a Cause" and "Giant," actor/photographer was almost never without his camera. It was, in fact, at the urging of his pal Dean that Hopper took up the lensman's craft to have "another discipline besides acting," according to the text of "Dennis Hopper: Photographs 1961 - 1967." It was exactly that advice that led to a decade long portfolio that captured many of the leading progenitors of the West Coast art scene as well as a slice of his Hollywood years and an array of distinctive photographs taken throughout 60's L.A. From his perch in Venice, California, Hooper ensconced himself in a scene that included upstarts like Ed Ruscha, Ed Kienholz, Wally Berman, and Billy Al Bengston as well as partaking in visits with east coasters Roy Lichtenstein and der Warhol himself (all pictured herein). Hopper's position in the West Coast art community gives us a gritty, realistic, insider's view of a nascent group that eventually competed head on with the famed modern artists of the New York scene.
In addition to his photographic work, Hopper's film career is fully explored in text and photos covering everything from his career building roles in films like "The Trip" and "Easy Rider" to his later work in a wide panoply of films from "Apocalypse Now' (where Francis Ford Coppola cast him as a Vietnam photo-journalist) to "Blue Velvet" to his own film "The Last Movie" and dozens more. Ample text is provided throughout by Iranian-born exhibitor Tony Shafrazi with contributions from Walter Hopps, Victor Bockris, Jessica Huntley and the subject himself. With both a comprehensive filmography as well as a publication and exhibition history, "Photographs" is much more than an art compilation, but rather serves as a definitive history of the full creative output of the man himself. In short, a major and essential work.