Oroville Mercury-Register

Robert Altman, 1960s countercul­ture photograph­er, dies at 76

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SAN FRANCISCO » Robert Altman, a photojourn­alist who captured San Francisco’s burgeoning countercul­ture of the 1960s and became chief staff photograph­er at Rolling Stone magazine, has died. He was 76.

Altman was found dead in his San Francisco home on Sept. 24 after a long battle with esophageal cancer, Felicia McRee, the executor of his estate, said Tuesday. A cause of death is pending.

Born in New York City, Altman studied photograph­y with Ansel Adams before heading west to San Francisco in 1968, where he became a fixture in the city’s art community, easily making friends and photograph­ing hippies, protesters, revolution­aries and rock and roll artists.

“Robert was a wonderful and loveable mensch and friend,” Frankie Ann, a film director who is working on a documentar­y about Altman’s life and work, said in a statement. “As one of the lead Rolling Stone photograph­ers, Altman’s exquisitel­y candid shots capture the historic moments that have come to define the ‘60s.”

The first photograph­s he snapped in San Francisco — hippies frolicking in Golden Gate Park — were published in an undergroun­d weekly called Good Times, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

“They gave me the front page and the full back cover and an inside spread, I was up all night waiting for the paper to come out,” Altman told rock journalist Ben FongTorres, who wrote the introducti­on to “The Sixties: Photograph­s,” a book Altman published in 2007.

The book included iconic images of Tina Turner, Dave Crosby and Keith Richards that were covers of Rolling Stone magazine and many other photograph­s of rock and roll concerts and stars he shot while at the magazine from 1970 to 1973.

During his career, Altman captured more than 30,000 images, visually documentin­g everything, including Jim Morrison performing live, the Rolling Stones’ recording sessions for their “Let It Bleed” album, the 60’s countercul­ture and the world of fashion.

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