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Established in 1996 |
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Tuesday, August 12, 2025 |
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Rock and Pop Posters up for Sale in London |
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Jimi Hendrix by Martin Sharp.
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LONDON.- The Movie Poster Art Gallery presents a unique selling exhibition of rare original Rock and Pop posters. The advertising campaigns behind record releases and the promotion of bands is one of popular music's most creative offshoots, but also one of the least well known and most under-appreciated. Over the decades a wealth of often anonymous graphic design talent has powerfully shaped the public image of singers, bands and even whole record companies.
The anarchic work of Jamie Reid for the Sex Pistols, the industrial-classical pastiches of Peter Saville for Factory Records and the imagined worlds of Roger Dean for Yes created a total visual language and stylistic expression for their bands in an involvement that often went much deeper than mere packaging and proved hugely influential. A less well known area is Morrissey's own creative inspiration and direction over the teasingly suggestive imagery that so distinguished The Smiths' record sleeves and.....not so well known....posters. One of the most brilliantly conceived visual 'themes' in Pop history, appropriately for Morrissey "they suggest much but admit nothing".
For 1987's single 'Sheila Take A Bow' the cover star was Andy Warhol's transvestite Factory 'Superstar' Candy Darling, in a shot from Warhol's 1971 'Women In Revolt'. Born James Lawrence Slattery, Candy was memorably immortalised in Lou Reed's 'Walk On The Wild Side'. One polemical exception was conceived for 1985's 'Meat Is Murder'. Morrissey took the famous image of the determinedly non-Aquarian young Vietnam 'grunt' (from Emile de Antonio's 1969 anti-war film 'In the Year of the Pig') whose helmet bore the words "Make War Not Love" and replaced them with a heartful message of his own.
The 1960s saw the set conventions of record packaging beginning to break down, in sync with the corresponding expansion of musical boundaries. Photographer Robert Freeman's portfolio of portraits of Jazz giants John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderley, Coleman Hawkins and others was brought to Brian Epstein's attention and he went on to shoot five of The Beatles quirky and stylish album covers.
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