courtesy Taschen
Jeff Koon's eye-catching cover sees Lady Gaga transformed into a modern Venus, carefully covered by one of the artist's signature gazing balls.
courtesy Taschen
Patti Smith lovingly detailed her longtime relationship with photographer Robert Mapplethorpe in her 2010 memoir, "Just Kids." Smith was Mapplethorpe's most photographed subject (excluding himself).
courtesy Taschen
Andy Warhol's banana-sticker cover for The Velvet Underground and Nico is one of the most enduring images of '60s rock 'n' roll. (Underneath the banana peel is a pink banana.)
courtesy Taschen
Takashi Murakami art directed the covers for "Graduation" and its five singles. He also directed an animated three-minute video for the track "Good Morning."
courtesdy Taschen
Motivated by a desire to extend his reach as far as possible, Keith Haring painted a number of album covers for international stars like David Bowie and Run--D.M.C., as well as lesser-known acts like the rap duo Emanon.
courtesy Taschen
Swiss jazz trio Day & Taxi chose this photo from a series by Ai Weiwei documenting urban development in Beijing. Ai has himself released music, including a heavy metal album and a parody of the K-pop hit "Gangnam Style."
courtesy Taschen
In 2003, photographer Wolfgang Tillmans became the first non-Brit to win the prestigious Turner Prize. The photo used by Tiga was from a series of flower still-lifes taken that same year.
courtesy Taschen
San Francisco-based trio Deerhoof have said that David Shrigley's work has influenced their songwriting. The artist provided 12 paintings to be used as album covers for "Friend Opportunity."
courtesy Taschen
Sonic Youth licensed Gerhard Richter's "Kerze" (1983) for their last album before signing to a major label. The painting itself sold for $16.6 million in 2011.
courtesy Taschen
The artwork selected for the cover of "Salt" (2004) exemplifies Kara Walker's practice, which primarily focuses on the shocking violence of slavery and how similar modes of social domination and injustice persist today.
Courtesy Taschen
"Art Record Covers" by Francesco Spampinato, published by Taschen, is out now.
CNN  — 

When Columbia Records introduced the first LPs in 1948, they didn’t just change how we listen to music. They also changed how we see it by popularizing illustrated album covers. (Before WWII, most records typically came in generic sleeves.)

In “Art Record Covers,” a new book from Taschen, art historian Francesco Spampinato shows just how far the practice has developed, highlighting 500 album covers designed by renowned visual artists, from Peter Blake’s “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” cover in 1967 to Jeff Koons’ bold collage for Lady Gaga’s 2013 album, “Art Pop.”

“Contemporary art is usually surrounded by an aura of sacredness, as if it is elevated from the mundane realm of daily life,” writes Spampinato. “In contrast, artists themselves have been increasingly exploring new avenues with which to communicate more directly, notably through the development of participatory practices and the collateral venturing into pop cultural realm such as television, advertising design, and music.”

The album cover specifically offers artists a mode to communicate directly with a wide audience, sidestepping gatekeepers like critics, museums and curators, and removing the barriers of price and access. (“Many of these records can be bought cheaply at flea markets, local record stores, or online,” he notes.)

Spampinato focuses on the works of some 270 artists across various disciplines, including contemporary heavyweights like Damien Hirst and Ai Weiwei, and groundbreaking figures like Salvador Dalí, Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat. The diversity extends to the musicians featured too, with a mix of mainstream and underground musicians across genres.

Check out the gallery above for the stories behind 10 of the most recognizable album covers.

“Art Record Covers” by Francesco Spampinato, published by Taschen, is out now.