Betty Davis Is It Love Or Desire mp3 [via Light in the Attic]
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Antonio Lopez was arguably the most influential fashion illustrator of all time, inspiring fellow artists from the 1960s up to his death in 1987 (from complications related to AIDS), and on up through the present. Here's a small sampling of his other work:
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In the 1960s, Lopez, who had emigrated to New York from Puerto Rico with his family as a child, went to the Fashion Institute of Technology and shortly thereafter rose up quickly as a star illustrator for fashion magazines such as Harper's Bazaar and Vogue. In 1969 he moved to Paris with his long-time partner and fellow F.I.T. grad Juan Ramos.
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Lopez opened a salon with his good friend Karl Lagerfeld — a hang-out for various models and people in fashion society, and a place where Lopez taught workshops on illustration and American pop art. Somewhere along the line he met Betty Davis. Antonio photographed Betty and worked with her on the album cover for Nasty Gal.
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Eventually returning to New York in the late '70s, Lopez continued to design for magazines, as well as for Bloomingdale's, Saks Fifth Avenue, Fiorucci, and Studio 54. He published a few different books, the most sought-after being Antonio's Girls (1983).
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Antonio Lopez continues to be a major force in fashion illustration. I can't say I love everything he did in the '80s — I just happen to prefer his earlier work — but at this point it's all classic. The cover for Betty Davis' Nasty Gal — similar to the style he perfected for the covers of so many Interview magazines — is a favorite of mine, and there is no doubt Lopez deserves his status as an underground legend.
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Visit artnet for more images and info on Antonio Lopez.
Head over to lightintheattic.net for more info and/or to order Nasty Gal and Is It Love Or Desire, the new CDs from Betty Davis.
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