Current Exhibition

Burt Goldblatt's Jazz Gallery 2

A collaboration of The Jazz Loft and the Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center

Photography and artwork on exhibit through September 26, 2026

burt goldblattPhotographer, photo editor, artist, award-winning record jacket designer and book designer Burt Goldblatt had a style that became a staple of mid century visual arts — innovative, creative, bold, improvisational, and always well researched and informed.

From the pages of Life, Playboy, Esquire, and Metronome, to the walls of the Smithsonian, Goldblatt's creations defined American popular culture in many ways, most tangibly in the form of records purchased, owned, held, and well worn by hundreds of thousands of LP-loving Americans.

Ever the creative improvisor, Goldblatt used nonconventional techniques for the time in designing and crafting his creations. He often drew on photography and line drawings for his covers of cool-jazz LPs.  

In the early 1950’s after the introduction of the LP, the most progressive American cover designs were created for jazz albums, and Mr. Goldblatt was among the pioneers in establishing the cool-jazz style.  It encompassed black and white portraits and studio photographs, including expressionistic line drawings of performers in action.  He alternated between using photography and drawings and his distinctive covers show close ups of musicians blowing their instruments at the same time striving for visual simplicity. 

Burt Goldblatt was born in Dorchester, Massachusetts, and after serving in the Army in the Pacific during World War II, he studied at the Massachusetts College of Art. After graduation, he worked in a printing plant where he learned the craft, from stripping negatives to plate-making. He taught himself photography.

After freelancing as a commercial artist in Boston, Goldblatt moved to New York and from 1953-1955, he worked for CBS Television designing promotions and credit crawls for Red Skelton, Edward R. Murrow and Jack Benny as well as for hit shows “Rawhide” and “Bachelor Father”. He also began specializing in album cover design and created about 200 covers in 1955 alone.

Although Goldblatt worked for Decca and Atlantic Records, he designed most prodigiously for small labels, including Savoy, Jolly Roger and Bethlehem. He became known for abstracted caricatures and distorted portraits, but his photographic cover designs for Bethlehem helped define the genre by combining evocative photos with restrained yet lyrical typography. 

Goldblatt was a denizen of recording studios and nightclubs where he shot untold numbers of images, some of which he later used for cover designs. He continued designing covers, including some for gospel and pop albums, into the 1960’s. He also co-authored 17 books including: Burt Goldblatt’s Jazz Gallery One (Newbold Publishing, 1982), and Newport Jazz Festival (Dial Press, 1977). 

Biography from: 

Burt Goldblatt, ctsimages.com/pages/archives/goldblatt_burt.html. Accessed 20 May 2026.

 

Download the Exhibit Brochure

View Goldblatt's Discography

 

Photo gallery from the exhibit: