|
|
Written by Sarah Boslaugh Tuesday, 15 March 2011 12:57
Heaven Hell won’t win any prizes for documentary technique but offers an intriguing glimpse inside a little-known subculture.
If you’ve bought a rock album in the last 40 years you’ve probably seen the artwork of Storm Thorgerson. He is credited with bringing surrealism to the medium, and has designed some of the most iconic album covers ever. Thorgerson and his work are the subject of Taken by Storm: The Art of Storm Thorgerson and Hipgnosis, directed by Roddy Bogawa, a film which offers a fine example of what can be achieved when a traditional documentary is done right. The ingredients are basic—interviews, archival materials, Thorgerson’s art itself, and alternative versions of covers which were not used—and yet this film is never less than fascinating, delivering a real sense of both the man and his art. Thorgerson’s most famous album cover is probably Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd—against a black background, it shows a prism bending a ray of light into a rainbow, similar to what was in your junior high school textbook but in color—notable not only for its simplicity, but also for the lack of traditional cover elements (no picture of the band, not even the name of the band or the album).