Hopkins, Budd

Budd_Hopkins,_Rome,_1997

Hopkins, Budd

Budd Hopkins – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Elliot Budd Hopkins was born in 1931 and raised in Wheeling, West Virginia.[3][4] He lived with his parents, Elliot T. Hopkins and Eleanor A. Hopkins, brother, Stewart, and sister, Eleanor.[5] At age two, Hopkins contracted polio.[3] During the long recovery process, Hopkins developed an interest in drawing [2][3] and watercolors,[6] which eventually lead him to Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio, where he graduated with a bachelor’s degree in art history in 1953.[3] It was here, Hopkins was exposed to art with “a capital A,”[7] and attended a lecture by Robert Motherwell that first introduced him to the “automatic, gestural approach that Motherwell espoused.”[7]

From Oberlin, Hopkins moved to New York City, where he met Franz Kline, Mark Rothko, Robert Motherwell, Willem de Kooning and other abstract expressionists.[2][3][7] For a time, Hopkins studied art history at Columbia University and worked a low-level job selling tickets at the Museum of Modern Art.[7][8] His experimentation with collage techniques and style as an abstract expressionist,[9] won him national acclaim.[4] Hopkins’ first solo show was held in New York City in 1956, the same year he met and married his first wife of thirteen years, Joan Rich.[7]

In 1976, Hopkins was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for painting[citation needed]. He also received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts[citation needed]. His articles on art appeared in magazines and journals, and he lectured at many art schools, including Truro Center for the Arts at Castle Hill.[citation needed] In 1993 he was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate member and became a full Academician in 1994.[citation needed]

After the publication of Missing Time in 1981,[4] his UFO research began to take precedence over his art.[2][3] As a self-described humanist,[10] Hopkins saw his work with alleged alien abduction victims as a way to bring attention to an otherwise marginalized part of society.[11] His follow up book Intruders: The Incredible Visitations at Copley Woods, published in 1987,[12] helped establish Hopkins as a prominent leader in the UFO movement.[13]

By 1983, Hopkins was married to art critic[14] April Kingsley,[7] with whom he had a daughter, Grace Hopkins-Lisle[3] Their marriage ended in divorce in 1991.[7]

In 1989, Hopkins organized the Intruders Foundation in Manhattan[3] to provide support for alleged victims of alien abduction, conduct research and investigations, and promote public awareness of the phenomenon.[13][15] The organization became inactive after his death in 2011.[citation needed]

The 1992 made-for-television film Intruders featured fictionalized characters based on the works of Hopkins and psychiatrist John E. Mack,[16] and, like Hopkins’ book of the same name, portrayed abduction scenes.[3]

In 1994, Hopkins met writer, filmmaker Carol Rainey,[17] who became his third wife in 1996.[3][7] They shared a mutual fascination with alien abduction stories and, according to Rainey, possibility that people on Earth may have been “seeded here by highly advanced beings or a Big Being from ‘out there.’[17]” The two co-authored a book Sight Unseen, Science, UFO Invisibility and Transgenic Beings, which was published in 2003. They were married for 10 years.[17]

Also in 1996, Hopkins’ book Witnessed: The True Story of the Brooklyn Bridge UFO Abductions was published.[18] The book portrayed an abduction case that was alleged to have occurred in late 1989 near the Brooklyn Bridge in New York City.[19]

Hopkins died on August 21, 2011 from complications of cancer.[3] At the time of his death, he was in a relationship with journalist Leslie Kean.[3][7][20]

kean-hopkins Budd-Leslie-Museum

Budd Hopkins with former wife and co-author, Carol Rainey, 1996
Budd Hopkins with former wife and co-author, Carol Rainey, 1996

 


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