1.
Up until 1938, album covers consisted of simple, undifferentiated brown cardboard. But they were suddenly transformed into objects designed with very clear graphic purposes. The beginning of this change is associated with Alex Steinwess (1917-2011), the art director of Columbia Records who, aged 23, urged the label to develop an innovative and attractive approach to sell records. This was the discovery of a lifetime, as he subsequently secretly revealed: I would have paid them for the job. Album covers progressively played a decisive role in the construction of the identity of record labels, without exception. A large proportion of these graphic solutions, in particular the albums produced in the late 1960s, gained widespread recognition, due to their connection to key moments in the history of popular music, from The Beatles to The Velvet Underground, from the Rolling Stones to Pink Floyd. On the other hand, such iconic relationships are rare, in the context of all existing musical production. In light of this fact, a consistent visual project can be as significant, or more significant, than the music itself. Over recent years, collectors who first grasped this reality — i.e. the importance of this musical format as a space for visual representation — have built significant album cover collections, from the most influential collectors, such as Guy Schraenen (1941-2018) whose collection was published in Vinyl Records & Covers By Artists, 2005, to more obscure ones, such as Jan Bellekens, who published Covered: Classic Sleeves And Their Imitators, 2011. Of all the graphic manifestations that we associate with album covers, I was interested in pursuing a less evident, and somewhat more subterranean line of enquiry — that focused on the meeting places between this history and the parallel history of photography. I began to look for and acquire vinyl records whose covers featured historical photographs, appropriated by musicians, designers or editors who, at some point, chose pre-existing images to create the identity for their records. It is, therefore, a collection that consists of iconic, historical and artistic images, in which the original photographs have been presented in museological contexts. They are, therefore, photographs that have been transferred from galleries and museums and were not initially created in order to be used in this specific object. It is a collection based on the encounter between two histories: of musical culture and of photography.
2.
The collection has been built through reducing the distance between each original photograph and its reception, referring to the principles of reproduction and dissemination of the artistic work that André Malraux explored in his essay, Museum Without Walls. Above all, the idea of reproducing the artwork as being synonymous with expanding the physical space of the museum, through an experience in which the observer gains in the field of knowledge but loses in the field of authenticity. The understanding of this distance is evident in these album covers. The works presented here were taken from their original artistic contexts and reproduced in a distorted manner from their original matrices — from the work initially thought and conceived by their authors. Firstly, by transforming the scale, and also by altering the format, framing, colour, juxtaposing it with other images, among many other possibilities of adulteration. One of the most stimulating aspects of this collection is precisely the experience of confrontation between the original work and its reproduction. A set of mirrors that is only possible to establish through the inventory available in the collection section of this website, in which each entry in the collection is accompanied by a technical sheet that specifies the details of the album and also the origin of the photograph: the author, title and date. This exercise is built on a classification and documentation system which may be debatable, but which, at the same time, is entirely necessary to identify connections between the objects hitherto available on the platform.
3.
Discovering, studying, thinking and making an inventory of the history of photography based on the album covers of popular music encouraged research and a collection of cases that consisted of a sum of artistic conceptions and representations using very different formal and conceptual assumptions. The collection is not framed within a closed artistic orientation. Its exclusive nature is to uphold the core criterion that the photographs belong to widely recognized authors. Integrating the heterogeneity of these creative processes, which often lie outside more established contexts, has driven my review of the history of photography, admitting alternative and complementary narratives that encourage the construction of more plural discourses. For example, the discovery of photographers from less obvious locations, while allowing new interpretations to be formulated about the paths taken by photographers who play an essential role in this story. As the collection expanded, it became equally challenging to identify a set of resonances between image and sound. Using this website, it is now possible to establish correspondences between different photographic typologies and musical genres. The most evident example of this intersection is the reproduction, on Blues album covers, of photographs from the Farm Security Administration — the programme created to combat rural impoverishment during the Great Depression. Another relationship that has become undeniable over time is the presence of the photomontages created by John Heartfield (1891-1968) on Punk music album covers. Finally, this collection not only aims to consider these possible relationships or identify the primordial photographs, it is intended, on the basis of an object not designed for this specific purpose, to activate the relationship with the photographic practice, admitting variations in terms of the uncertainty of how to read, interpret and construct the history of photography.
In 2007 I began to put together a collection of vinyl records with album covers that reproduce carefully-selected photographs. The focus of this collection is to gather images from the history of photography since its inception until the present day. The expansion of this personal research allowed me to explore visual and sound relationships that I ended up deepening in my PhD thesis, which I completed in January 2014. After all these years, I decided to share the inventory of my collection through this website, sharing a part of all the objects that I have been gathering. The entry for each vinyl record includes information about the album (music artist, nationality, title, label, year or music genre), and a short caption about the original photograph (author, title, nationality, year and related tags). Collection is a never-ending process, so the website is updated regularly, at the rate of once a month. I have done my utmost to provide strict specifications for each record, but if you discover any inaccuracies or have any extra information, please contact me. Thank you. Stay tuned!
I am an Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Fine Arts of the University of Porto (FBAUP), since 1999. Member of the Executive Board of FBAUP. Director of the Master’s Program in Image Design (MDI), since 2014, and run the Centre for Studies in Design and Art (CEDA), since 2015. I am researcher at ID+ and i2ADS. I completed my Master's degree in 2005 and my PhD in 2014. My full CV is available here. You can listen to my Radio Show, find me on Instagram and drop me an email jc[at]josecarneiro[dot]org.
JOHN HEARTFIELD / INFEST
DAVID WOJNAROWICZ / U2
BILL BRANDT / THREE CLOUDS IN THE SKY
WEEGEE (ARTHUR FELLIG) / JOHN ZORN
JULIA MARGARET CAMERON / BOOK OF LOVE
NOBUYOSHI ARAKI / THE VAN PELT
ÉTIENNE CARJAT / ARTO LINDSAY
TODD HIDO / SILVERSUN PICKUPS
CHEMA MADOZ / LAURENT PETITGAND
THOMAS HOEPKER / GO!ZILLA
BRUCE DAVIDSON / FONTAINES D.C.
BERENICE ABBOTT / VAN MORRISON
ANDRÉ KERTÉSZ / UNIVERS ZÉRO
ABBAS ATTAR / BUFFALO TOM
DIANE ARBUS / THE SOUTHERN DEATH CULT
JOSEPHINE PRYDE / BLESSED INITIATIVE
GERTRUDE KÄSEBIER / COCTEAU TWINS
SAKAE TAMURA / SIOUXSIE AND THE BANSHEES
SALLY MANN / HELLMENN
HERBERT BAYER / TANIT
HELEN LEVITT / BUFFALO TOM
JOHN DIVOLA / LORENZO SENNI
MASAHISA FUKASE / INDOCHINE
ADOLF DE MEYER / LOREN CONNORS
DEANA LAWSON / BLOOD ORANGE
WOLFGANG TILLMANS / PET SHOP BOYS
DAVID HURN / TØSEDRENGENE
CINDY SHERMAN / ARTHUR DOYLE
ALEXANDER RODCHENKO / CAN
BERNARD FAUCON / TUXEDOMOON
TEE CORINNE / SUEDE
JASMINE DEPORTA / TROPIC OF CANCER
WILLIAM EGGLESTON / GREEN ON RED
ANTÓNIO JÚLIO DUARTE / SERPENTE
EDUARDO GAGEIRO / HERÓIS DO MAR
ED VAN DER ELSKEN / GOD
SANDY SKOGLUNG / ΓΚΟΥΛΑΓΚ
JAMES WELLING / SONIC YOUTH
DAN GRAHAM / REAL ESTATE
PETER HUJAR / ANTONY AND THE JOHNSONS
MIKA KITAMURA / VARIOUS ARTISTS
HIRO TANAKA / JEFF ROSENSTOCK
EVE ARNOLD / AU PAIRS
SERGEĬ MIKHAĬLOVICH PROKUDIN-GORSKIĬ / BIOSPHERE
GILLES CARON / HELDON
JOSEF KOUDELKA / KAREL KRYL
AMANDA CHARCHIAN / EL MAY
BIANCA BRUNNER / JONNY NASH
LEAH GORDON / DRUMMERS AND SINGERS OF THE SOCIETE ABSOLUMENT GUININ
MARGARET BOURKE-WHITE / THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS