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“I wanted to do something that opened people’s eyes and let people think,” he said. Most of Nachum’s works include subjects with obstructed eyesight and corresponding messages in Braille. The cover image is actually part of the Israeli-born artist’s “Blind” series, which largely focuses on the concepts of inner and outer vision and the metaphor of “opening” viewers’ eyes. It’s tinted with naïvety-here is a picture of Rihanna when she was not yet Rihanna but Robyn Fenty of Barbados-yet, with the red and the crown, also with an innate, inevitable power. The entire image covered with Braille dots. The cover art, titled If They Let Us, Part I shows the singer as a young child with a crown over her eyes, engulfed in a veil of red paint. Last week, the “Bitch Better Have My Money” singer and Vanity Fair cover star revealed the name and cover art of her new album, Anti.
Musicians and visual artists have long had a beautiful, symbiotic relationship, especially when it comes to album covers: from the Velvet Underground’s collaboration with Andy Warhol, to Kanye West and George Condo, to Lady Gaga and Jeff Koons, and now Rihanna and Israeli-born artist Roy Nachum.