Released in 1971, Andy Warhol's Velvet Underground Featuring Nico brought together material from the band's first two albums alongside additional recordings. The compilation's title highlights Warhol's close association with the group, whose early career he helped promote and shape.
The cover features Warhol's celebrated Coca-Cola paintings, first developed in the early 1960s. For Warhol, Coca-Cola represented something uniquely American. As he famously observed, presidents, movie stars and ordinary citizens all drank the same Coke. The image reflected one of the central ideas of Pop Art: transforming familiar everyday products into works of art.
The album demonstrates how Warhol's visual language extended far beyond record covers, connecting music, consumer culture and fine art in a single image.