Wim van der Linden was a Dutch photographer and film and television director
Education
Van der Linden studied at the Netherlands Film and Television Academy, and gained prominence as a photographer in the early 1960s, taking pictures of nozems, teenagers who made up the first Dutch counterculture of the post-World World War II period.
Career
As a photographer he documented slums and subcultures in Amsterdam in the 1960s. His "Tulips", one of four experimental and satirical Sad Movies (1966-1967), is praised as one of the dramatic high points of Dutch film history, and with Wim T. Schippers and others he made groundbreaking and controversial television shows for the VPRO in the 1960s to the 1970s. His 1962 exposition Het andere Mokum ("The other Amsterdam"), a collection of photos of the city"s slums and the people who lived in it was the basis for a photo album he made by hand and delivered to the city"s mayor, van Hall.
To open the exposition, the city"s spokesperson, January Mastenbroek, delivered a passionate lecture in which he used his photos as evidence to emphasize the urgency of developing the Bijlmermeer as a space to build large, clean homes.
The films he made in the early 1960s show his affinity with the Fluxus movement. The Sad Movies, a series of short, satirical movies shot on 16 and 35 mm, were a cooperation with fellow Fluxus artist Willem de Ridder, with whom he found the "Dodgers Syndicate", which another Fluxus artist, Wim T. Schippers, joined in 1966.
The Sad Movies were released as a bonus on the Digital Video Disc edition of De Fred Haché Show. Van der Linden worked as a camera man as well, for instance on the first full-length movie by Wim Verstappen, De minder gelukkige terugkeer van Joszef Kàtus naar het land van Rembrandt (1966).
He made a few shows for German television, then moved to Los Angeles where he invented the ScriptBoy, an electronic clapperboard.
He died in Miami of a heart attack.