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By Jerry de Wilde

Publisher: Angel City Press
Publication date: May 2026
Print length: 208 pages
Language: English
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The visual history of the American counterculture finds a rigorous archival update in In Case You Missed It: Counterculture Photography of the 1960s and 1970s. The volume centralizes the work of Jerry “Dok” de Wilde, a photographer whose proximity to the era’s most significant social and artistic upheavals provided him with an unfiltered vantage point. De Wilde, whose father was a prominent figure in the Dutch Resistance and an influential theatrical designer, brought a disciplined eye to the seemingly chaotic developments of the Los Angeles scene. His documentation tracks the evolution of a decade defined by the rejection of traditional institutional structures, moving from the localized experiments of the Hollywood Hills to the mass mobilizations of the anti-war movement.

A primary focus of the collection is "the Farm," an agrarian commune situated in the hills above Los Angeles that functioned as a laboratory for alternative living. De Wilde’s imagery records the daily logistics of communal life, capturing the intersection of creative labor and social radicalism. These intimate domestic scenes are juxtaposed against high-profile cultural milestones, including the 1967 Monterey International Pop Festival. During this event, de Wilde captured iconic frames of Jimi Hendrix and Otis Redding, documenting the precise moment when the hippie movement transitioned into a global media phenomenon. His lens serves as a technical witness to the aesthetic shifts in fashion and performance that would eventually permeate mainstream American culture.

The publication also addresses the political maturation of the era through de Wilde’s coverage of the Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam and various civil rights demonstrations. By navigating fluidly between the private spaces of artists and the public squares of activists, the book presents a layered analysis of a community bound by the pursuit of systemic transformation. The high-contrast black-and-white plates and vibrant color sequences emphasize the sensory density of the period. In Case You Missed It functions as a cold, evidence-based survey of a fleeting sociological climate, preserving the visual data of a generation that attempted to redefine the American social contract before the tide of the 1970s brought new economic and political realities.

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