in 2009. The asylum appeared on the cover of the 1970 American release. The original 1970 US release of
The Man Who Sold the World featured a cartoon-like cover drawing by Bowie's friend
Michael J. Weller, featuring a cowboy in front of
Cane Hill asylum. Weller, whose friend was a patient there, suggested the idea after Bowie had asked him to create a design that would capture the music's foreboding tone. Drawing on
pop art styles, he depicted a dreary main entrance block to the hospital with a damaged clock tower. For the design's foreground, Weller used a photograph of the actor
John Wayne to draw a cowboy figure wearing a ten-gallon hat and holding a rifle, which was meant to be an allusion to the song "Running Gun Blues". Bowie suggested Weller incorporate the "exploding head" signature on the cowboy's hat, a feature he had previously used on his posters while a part of the
Arts Lab. He also added an empty
speech balloon for the cowboy figure, which was intended to include the line "roll up your sleeves and show us your arms"—a pun on record players, guns, and drug use—but Mercury found the idea too risqué and the balloon was left blank. Bowie wanted the album titled
Metrobolist, a play on
Fritz Lang's 1927 film
Metropolis, but Mercury changed the title without Bowie's consent to
The Man Who Sold the World. Bowie was enthusiastic about the finished design, but soon reconsidered the idea and had the art department at Philips Records, a subsidiary of Mercury, enlist the photographer Keith MacMillan to shoot an alternate cover. The shoot took place in a "domestic environment" of the Haddon Hall living room, where Bowie reclined on a
chaise longue in a cream and blue satin "man's dress", an early indication of his interest in exploiting his
androgynous appearance. The dress was designed by the British fashion designer
Michael Fish. Bowie's look and pose in the photo were inspired by a
Pre-Raphaelite painting by
Dante Gabriel Rossetti. In the United States, Mercury rejected MacMillan's photo and released the album with Weller's design as its cover, much to Bowie's displeasure, although he successfully lobbied the label to use the photo for the release in the United Kingdom. In 1972, he said Weller's design was "horrible" but reappraised it in 1999, saying he "actually thought the cartoon cover was really cool". While promoting
The Man Who Sold the World in the US, Bowie wore the Fish dress in February 1971 on his first promotional tour and during interviews, despite the fact that the Americans had no knowledge of the then-unreleased UK cover. The 1971 German release's artwork presented a winged hybrid creature with Bowie's head and a hand for a body, preparing to flick the Earth away. For the cover of the 1972 worldwide reissue by
RCA Records, the label used a black-and-white photograph of Bowie in character as
Ziggy Stardust in an action pose, wielding a guitar and with his left leg up in the air. The pose was inspired by Bowie's friend Freddie Buretti, who appeared in a similar pose for a brochure in July 1972. The image remained the cover art on reissues until 1990 when the
Rykodisc release reinstated the UK "dress" cover. The "dress" cover has appeared on subsequent reissues of the album. In 2011, when the
Victoria and Albert Museum in London was putting together the list of Bowie artifacts for the
David Bowie Is show, the curators asked for the dress to display, but found that the dress had gone missing from Bowie's collection. ==Release==