Richard E. Aaron (1949–2016) photographed approximately 4,000 musical artists over a career that spanned more than three decades — and the world noticed. Modern Photography magazine named him one of the "10 Best Rock Photographers" in the world. His work appeared in more than 45,000 magazines, newspapers, and books worldwide. His image of Peter Frampton graces Frampton Comes Alive! — still the best-selling double live LP in history. His photograph of Paul McCartney became the first rock-and-roll cover of Time magazine. He was the man in the room — on stage, in the pit, and backstage — when Aerosmith, AC/DC, Led Zeppelin, David Bowie, Freddie Mercury, Bob Marley, James Brown, and the Sex Pistols were making the music that would define a generation. FATHOM represented Richard until his death in 2016 and was proud to present his final solo exhibition, Rock On Paper, at our DTLA gallery in 2015. Richard's archive is the documented visual record of rock and roll at its most alive, made by a man who, in the words of his longtime friend and manager Jeff Jampol, "was one of us." Every print in this collection is produced from Richard's original scans from camera negatives, retouhed and printed to museum archival standards in our in-house studio.