Kendrick Lamar's Album Art: A Visual Timeline
From Section.80 to Mr. Morale, trace the evolution of Kendrick Lamar's album covers — how his visual identity grew alongside his music.
Few artists use album art as deliberately as Kendrick Lamar. Each cover is a thesis statement — a single image that frames everything inside. Trace them in order and you can watch an artist grow from a Compton storyteller into one of the most important voices of his generation.
Here's the visual timeline.
Section.80 (2011)
Kendrick seated on the floor against a wall, surrounded by candles, an American flag draped behind him. Raw, low-budget, and intimate — the cover of an artist still defining himself, but already thinking in symbols. The flag and candles signal the social weight his music would carry.
good kid, m.A.A.d city (2012)
A faded family snapshot: relatives around a baby Kendrick, a 40oz bottle on the table, gang signs visible, the adults' eyes blacked out. It looks pulled from a real photo album — the perfect frame for a coming-of-age story set in Compton. The blurred faces add a documentary unease.
The shift: from staged symbolism to found-photo intimacy.
To Pimp a Butterfly (2015)
The masterpiece. A crowd of shirtless Black men celebrate on the White House lawn, a defeated judge at their feet, shot in stark black-and-white by Denis Rouvre. It's joyful and political at once, referencing photojournalism while making history. The most ambitious hip-hop cover of its decade.
The shift: from personal story to national statement.
untitled unmastered. (2016)
Almost no design at all — plain text on a near-blank field, like an internal file label or a spreadsheet. For a collection of demos and loose ends, the anti-design is the design. It signals raw, unpolished process.
The shift: confidence to release something deliberately unfinished-looking.
DAMN. (2017)
A flatly lit snapshot of Kendrick against a brick wall, bold red all-caps title, "PARENTAL ADVISORY" aesthetic baked in. Deliberately blunt and meme-ready — and endlessly parodied. The plainness is a flex.
The shift: maximal concept replaced by maximal directness.
Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers (2022)
Photographed by Renell Medrano: Kendrick wearing a crown of thorns, holding his children, a firearm visible at his waistband. Domestic and biblical at once — fatherhood, faith, trauma, and danger compressed into one image. His most personal and most loaded cover.
The shift: from public statement back to private reckoning.
The Throughline
What connects every Kendrick cover is intention. He never uses an image just to look good — each one argues something. From candles and flags to crowns of thorns, his artwork has always told you exactly what the record is about before a single beat drops.
Make Any of These Your Wall Art
In PosterVibe, search any Kendrick album and the cover art, tracklist, and year load straight into the editor. Pick a template, customize the layout, and export at 300 DPI for print.
Hang the visual timeline of one of the greatest catalogs in modern music.
Start designing your Kendrick poster — free →
Which Kendrick cover is your favorite? Tell us in the community.
