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Cosmic Slop: Pedro Bell’s fantastic, far-out and funky Funkadelic album art
03.18.2016
09:05 am
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Artwork for the 1979 Funkadelic album, Uncle Jam Wants You by Pedro Bell
Artwork for the 1979 Funkadelic album, ‘Uncle Jam Wants You’ by Pedro Bell
 
Artist Pedro Bell is probably best known for the album art, cartoons and strange sexed-up illustrations that have appeared on and inside albums for Funkadelic and Funkadelic frontman, George Clinton. In 2009, the Chicago native was in pretty rough shape—he was losing his sight, required dialysis treatments for his failing kidneys, and was almost evicted from his apartment. Thankfully, things have improved for Bell since then and I’m happy to report that he’s got several projects in progress that will hopefully help bring more recognition to his massive, mind-bending body of work.
 
Album artwork for The Electric Spanking of War Babies by Pedro Bell
Funkadelic’s “The Electric Spanking of War Babies” by Pedro Bell
 
Gatefold view of the 1978 Funkadelic album, One Nation Under a Groove by Pedro Bell
Gatefold view of the 1978 Funkadelic album, ‘One Nation Under a Groove’ by Pedro Bell.
 
Enlarged image of a cartoon inside
Enlarged image of a cartoon inside ‘One Nation Under a Groove’ taking a jab at Mick Jagger.
 
Album artwork for the 1974 Funkadelic album, Standing on the Verge of Getting It On by Pedro Bell
Album artwork for the 1974 Funkadelic album, ‘Standing on the Verge of Getting It On’
 
I remember being at the library when I was a kid (you know, that place where they used to have all the books?), and being absolutely fascinated with Bell’s images on albums like The Electric Spanking of War Babies (with the giant phallus masquerading as a spaceship and a naked woman inside), or the curiously cool cartoons inside the gatefold sleeve of 1978’s One Nation Under a Groove.

It should also be noted that not only did Bell create images that helped build the mystique of Funkadelic as an entity, he also contributed to the band’s, well-known groovy lexicon. On George Clinton’s official website, Bell is affectionately referred to as an artist who “inverted psychedelia through the ghetto like an urban Hieronymus Bosch”—a statement that could not more perfectly describe Bell’s trippy illustrations and artwork.

Much more Pedro Bell after the jump, plus a short cartoon featuring Bell’s artwork in motion…

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Posted by Cherrybomb
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03.18.2016
09:05 am
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