Two Worlds. One Movement.
Where the visual punch of pop art meets the curatorial instinct that built modern music.
Andre Miripolsky and Ray Williams have spent their lives doing the same thing through different mediums — finding the bold, the brave, and the unmistakably original, then putting it in front of the world.
Where it began
Andre is the painter behind one of rock's most photographed costumes: the electric pop-art piano suit Elton John wore for the 1980 free concert in New York's Central Park. Ray, working at Liberty Records in 1967, answered an ad placed by a young Reginald Dwight — and changed the course of popular music by introducing him to lyricist Bernie Taupin.
Why now
Miripolsky × Williams is a creative platform — exhibitions, concerts, wearable art, and storytelling — built to fund the next wave of fearless artists and to show up loudly for communities hit by disaster.
What we do
- Create: Original artwork, limited drops, and collaborative collections.
- Convene: Concerts, gallery shows, and pop-up experiences.
- Champion: Emerging artists through the Fear No Art Initiative.
- Give back: Proceeds direct to disaster relief and arts education.
