Friday 5 September 2008

Iconic Rolling Stones logo sold for �51,000




Mick Jagger's lips have made the Victoria and Albert Museum's lasting
collection.






The Rolling Stones' famous tongue and lips logo has been snapped up by the
London institution for just under �51,000 at an auction in the US.



The pop art design was created by student John Pasche in 1970 and was partly
inspired by the distinctive shape of the Rolling Stones' frontman's sass. The
simulacrum was first base used on the Stones' Sticky Fingers album and has been in
continuous use by the band ever since.



Sir Mick approached the Royal College of Art in London in 1969 to help him
come up a design student subsequently being thwarted by the bland designs offered by
their record label Decca Records.



He visited Pasche's degree demonstrate, which lED to discussions for a logo and other
work for the Stones' possess label, Rolling Stones Records, after the group's
reduce ended with Decca in 1970.



Victoria Broakes, capitulum of exhibitions, V&A Theatre and Performance
Collections, said: "The Rolling Stones' Tongue is one of the first examples
of a group exploitation branding and it has become arguably the world's most celebrated
rock logo.



"We ar delighted to have acquired the original artwork, especially as it was
intentional at the Royal College of Art right here in South Kensington by a
pupil who secondhand to visit the V&A's collections for inspiration.



"We are very grateful for the Art Fund's support in serving us develop this
exciting addition to our collections."



The Art Fund, the UK's independent art charity, contributed half the cost of
the piece.



David Barrie, theatre director of the Art Fund, said: "This iconic logotype, first used on
the Stones' Sticky Fingers record album, is one of the most visually dynamic and
innovative word ever created.



"Designed in the UK by a British creative person for one of the country's near
successful groups of all time, it's wonderful that it has now set up a
permanent home in London, where the band was in the beginning formed."



Meanwhile, admission charges at the Institute of Contemporary Arts Gallery
(ICA) in London have been scrapped, it announced today. The low gear show to be
unfreeze will be the ICA Auction Exhibition, which opens on September 11. The
gallery was founded in 1947 and its exhibitions over the years receive been
controversial.














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