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ORIGINAL 1974 POP ART COVER LEONARD BERNSTEIN ANDY WARHOL LP RECORD N.MINT RARE

Sold Date: April 2, 2014
Start Date: March 10, 2014
Final Price: $99.99 (USD)
Seller Feedback: 9967
Buyer Feedback: 15


DANA GILLESPIE AIN'T GONNA PLAY NO SECOND FIDDLE WARHOL INSPIRED POP ART COVER  by RICHARD BERNSTEIN
RCA RECORDS CPL 1-0682 ORIGINAL 1974 PRESSING

Highly sought after and out of print for decades original 1974 pressing with Warhol inspired art cover by Factory regular Richard Bernstein.  Cover is suitable for framing with record in near mint condition.  The ultimate gift for any collector and a rare piece that will piece to grow in value. Bernstein was a longtime member of the Warhol circle. In the early 1960s, he moved into the Chelsea Hotel, which became the home of Edie Sedgwick and other Warhol superstars. In the 70s, he mingled with the art/fashion crowd that had met in Warhol’s Factory and the back room of Max’s Kansas City. He was a Studio 54 regular.
Mr. Bernstein created more than 120 portraits for Interview magazine; they appeared for 15 years, starting in 1972. He also made cover art for Time magazine and work for albums by the singer Grace Jones; stamp designs for the United Nations; and a portrait of Robert F. Kennedy for the Kennedy Library. Using an airbrush, pencil and pastel on photographic portraits, Bernstein made the up-and-coming celebrities of the era-Sylvester Stallone, Calvin Klein and Madonna look sleek and sexy. Megastar, a published collection of his vibrant celebrity portraits, including Cher, Matt Dillon Jackie O, Diana Ross, Richard Gere, Mary Tyler Moore, and many others was published by Indigo Books in 1984. The introduction of the book was written by Paloma Picasso who declared, ”Richard Bernstein portrays stars …. He celebrates their faces, he gives them larger-than-fiction size. He puts wit into the beauties, fantasy into the rich, depth into the glamorous and adds instant patina to newcomers.”
Bernstein’s work was often mistaken for Warhol’s and this was exacerbated by Warhol who delighted in signing the covers of Interview for his fans. ”Richard Bernstein’s faces are wonderful,” Warhol once said, adding, ”They’re so colorful, and he makes everyone look so famous.”