Comments/Context: Back in the days before the instantly disposable digital print, people seemed to have a hard time throwing photographs away. Rather than heedlessly pitching them in the bin, we tended to squirrel them away in boxes, pushed to the backs of closets and the recesses of attics, waiting for some later generation to unearth them once again. There was something mildly heretical about trashing history, and so for the most part we didn't; it was easier to let them gather dust than make the active decision to get rid of them. As a result, the recent history of photography is full of fantastic and improbable rediscovery stories: Vivian Maier, Mike Disfarmer, Charles Jones, Robert Capa's mexican suitcase, the list goes on and on. The story of this exhibit follows this same pattern: boxes of prints tucked away after Dennis Hopper's 1970 exhibit at the Fort Worth Art Center Museum, generally thought to be forever lost, but miraculously found once again.
The way these photographs are installed discourages focusing in on single images; your eye darts from picture to picture in these clusters, flitting from one to another like a hummingbird looking for nectar. Jane Fonda's wedding, the Kennedy funeral on pixelated TV, Martin Luther King Jr. giving a speech, a matador flashing his cape, an abstraction of torn posters, a hippie chick, a Rauchenberg and Cunningham performance, the groups return again and again to common visual themes, like refrains and choruses of a song. By the time you reach the fifth or sixth grouping, the patterns have settled into recognizable rhythms, a little of this, a little of that, all wrapped up in one long stream of consciousness memory.
By the early 1970s, Hopper had left photography behind for other pursuits, and while he did return to making pictures at various times later in his career, none of those images really match the verve and immediacy of these 1960s works. Looking back at them as an interwoven group, they have an undeniable right place right time vitality, even if Hopper's photographic voice hadn't entirely emerged. Seen together, they are a transporting, swaggering frieze of curious, idealistic, cultural signifiers.
Collector's POV: The photographs in this show are priced as follows. The clusters of 25 prints are priced at $250000 each (prints not sold individually) and the smaller single prints near the reception desk are $15000 each. Hopper's photographs have been intermittently available in the secondary markets in recent years, with prices ranging between roughly $5000 and $48000.
Rating: * (one star) GOOD (rating system described here)
Transit Hub:
- Artist site (here)
- Features/Reviews: New York Times (here), Daily Beast (here)
- Exhibit: MOCA retrospective, 2010 (here)
Dennis Hopper: The Lost Album
Through June 22nd
Gagosian Gallery
980 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10075
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