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Dennis Hopper’s lost prints documenting 1960s US history, art scene go on show in Berlin

BERLIN – A collection of more than 400 recently rediscovered prints in which Dennis Hopper documented the U.S. arts scene of the mid-1960s, the civil rights movement and much more is going on show in Berlin.

The actor and director’s daughter, Marin Hopper, said Wednesday of the exhibition at the German capital’s Martin-Gropius-Bau: “It’s a visit with him. It’s like being with him — it’s a very intimate experience seeing the photographs.”

The black-and-white, small-format photos were taken between 1961 and 1967, when Hopper was out of favour in Hollywood and before he directed “Easy Rider.” The prints were selected by Hopper for an exhibition in Fort Worth, Texas, in 1970.

The prints — some now showing signs of wear — were found among Hopper’s belongings after he died in 2010.

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