Step back into the early days of the Grateful Dead through the lens of photographer Jim Marshall. On the heels of the recent photobook, The Grateful Dead by Jim Marshall: Photos and Stories from the Formative Years, 1966–1977, The Ecology Center in San Diego will host an exhibition this weekend dedicated to the late photographer.

Presented by the Jim Marshall Estate and digital promoter Music Never Stopped, the showing is set for Saturday, December 6th, from 5 to 8 p.m. The evening “brings together music, imagery, and storytelling through a conversation about the making of this iconic collection.” Host of the Grateful Dead Hour David Gans and curator of Marshall’s estate Amelia Davis, who both curated the book, will accompany a slideshow of Jim’s work with some stories, and Gans—also an original singer-songwriter—will perform.

Related: Comprehensive ‘60 Years Of The Grateful Dead’ Art Exhibit To Open In December

Tickets for the Jim Marshall photography exhibit celebrating the early days of the Grateful Dead are on sale here for $47.50, with fees. Tickets include admission to the exhibit, slideshow, and performance, and drinks and appetizer-style food. Copies of The Grateful Dead by Jim Marshall will be available for purchase at the event.

An early friend of the Dead and an iconic chronicler of the countercultural movement, Jim Marshall was welcomed into the band’s family from the beginning. He took over 10,000 photos of the Dead, from iconic moments at Woodstock (where he was the head photographer) and the Human Be-In to simple images of domestic mundanity, capturing a balanced portrait of the Grateful Dead and its members’ rise to fame. Marshall, whom Annie Leibowitz called “the rock n’ roll photographer,” died in 2010 at the age of 74.