An unprecedented collection of artists’ record covers from the 1950s to today
Since the dawn of modernism,
visual and music production have had a particularly intimate relationship. From Luigi Russolo’s 1913 Futurist manifesto
L’Arte dei Rumori (
The Art of Noise) to Marcel Duchamp’s 1925 double-sided discs
Rotoreliefs, the 20th century saw ever more fertile exchange between sounds and shapes, marks and melodies, and different fields of composition and performance.
In Francesco Spampinato’s
unique anthology of artists’ record covers, we discover the rhythm of this
particular cultural history. The book presents 450 covers and records by visual artists from the 1950s through to today, exploring how
modernism, Pop Art, Conceptual Art, postmodernism, and various forms of
contemporary art practice have all informed this collateral field of visual production and supported the mass distribution of music with
defining imagery that swiftly and suggestively evokes an aural encounter.
Along the way, we find
Jean-Michel Basquiat’s urban hieroglyphs for his own Tartown record label,
Banksy’s stenciled graffiti for Blur, and a skewered
Salvador Dalí butterfly on Jackie Gleason’s
Lonesome Echo. There are insightful analyses and fact sheets alongside the covers listing the artist, performer, album name, label, year of release, and information on the original artwork. Interviews with Tauba Auerbach, Shepard Fairey, Kim Gordon, Christian Marclay,
Albert Oehlen, and Raymond Pettibon add personal accounts on the collaborative relationship between artists and musicians.
The author
Francesco Spampinato is a writer and historian of contemporary art and visual culture. He holds degrees from the University of Bologna and Columbia University, and a PhD from the Sorbonne Nouvelle University. From 2011 to 2015, he was an adjunct professor at the Rhode Island School of Design, and since 2019 he is a senior assistant professor at the University of Bologna. Author of several books and regular contributor to magazines and academic journals, he focuses on how contemporary artists interact with the media and everyday life in his own academic research.
The editor
Julius Wiedemann studied graphic design and marketing and was an art editor for newspapers and design magazines in Tokyo before joining TASCHEN in 2001. His titles include the Illustration Now! and Record Covers series, as well as the infographics collection and books about advertising and visual culture.