Peter Redgrove - The Black Goddess and the Sixth Sense - Bloomsbury - 1987 (cover illustration by Michael Trevithick)
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Australia
seen from Spain
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Italy

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from France

seen from Australia
seen from Netherlands
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Maldives

seen from Maldives
Peter Redgrove - The Black Goddess and the Sixth Sense - Bloomsbury - 1987 (cover illustration by Michael Trevithick)
Illustration by Michael Trevithick for Milan Kundera, “Let the Old Dead Make Room for the Young Dead,” Esquire, April, 1974.
[1972.02.25] Nick Drake - Pink Moon
Vinyl, Island - ILPS-9184
Cover by Michael Trevithick; Photography by Keith Morris; Typography by C.C.S. Associates.
Pink Moon by Nick Drake
Artwork by Michael Trevithick
Nick Drake - Pink Moon
Cover by Michael Trevithick for SEA OF TROUBLES (1969).
Nick Drake, “Pink Moon”
Nick Drake, Pink Moon (1972) Island Records Artist: Michael Trevithick
By the time Nick Drake was set to release his third album in 1972, his battle with depression had taken over his life. Island Records were worried about releasing a third album after his first two didn't sell with Drake’s refusal to promote his album with music, it didn’t seem very promising. He isolated himself in his apartment in London and worked on Pink Moon. The themes in the lyrics would be attributed to Drake’s battle with depression, drugs and alcohol.
When the time came to shoot the album cover photo, his label were hesitant to put him on the cover. Photographer Keith Morris, who photographed Drake for his first two records, Five Leaves Left and Bryter Layter, shot several images of him that would be denied by the label, feeling that Drake’s deteriorating appearance and hunched-over stature would not be good selling points.
This proved to be a difficult situation for Island’s creative director, Annie Sullivan. She was tasked with finding new art, but didn’t have a lot of direction to go on from Drake. His only request was that a pink moon be on the cover, as it was the title of the album.
"I remember going to talk to [Nick], and he just sat there, hunched up, and even though he didn't speak, I knew the album was called Pink Moon, and I can't remember how he conveyed it, whether he wrote it down ... he wanted a pink moon. He couldn't tell me what he wanted, but I had 'pink moon' to go on.”
The surrealist painting that was chosen for the cover was created by Michael Trevithick, a friend of Drake’s sister. Drake never gave his opinion on the cover before his death two years later, but the album and it’s accompanying artwork have gone down in music history as fantastic pieces of art.
Nick Drake - Pink Moon