The Famous Artists You Never Knew Were Friends

By Google Arts & Culture

Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat (1985) by Michael HalsbandSCAD Museum of Art

Discover the friendships that helped shape the art world

While we like to have this romantic image of a tortured artist working alone in their studio, the truth is, artists continually come together to collaborate, socialize, and learn from each other. Without this interaction, the waves of artistic movements, styles, and techniques that have been established over the centuries never would have developed.

Here we look at 8 famous artist friendships that are not only stories of genuine companionship, but ones that have gone on to define a movement or change in an artist’s career...

Self-Portrait Dedicated to Paul Gauguin (1888) by Vincent van GoghHarvard Art Museums

Paul Gauguin and Vincent van Gogh

Impressionist painters Paul Gauguin and Vincent van Gogh met in 1887. They hit it off straight away and soon after meeting, van Gogh invited Gauguin to stay with him in his house in Arles, France. This was in hopes of beginning his dream of having his own artist’s collective.

Vincent van Gogh painting sunflowers (1888) by Paul GauguinVan Gogh Museum

Both artists learnt from each other, spending their time developing new techniques and broadening their color palettes with new pigments. Despite this, tempers frayed and the friends had many quarrels due to van Gogh’s stubborn nature clashing with Gauguin’s pride. A few weeks before he left, Gauguin painted a portrait of van Gogh painting sunflowers. When the artist saw the painting, he supposedly said that, while it looks a bit like him, he felt Gauguin had portrayed him as “a madman”. However, later in a letter to his brother Theo van Gogh he said: “My face has lit up after all a lot since, but it was indeed me, extremely tired and charged with electricity as I was then”.

Portrait of Marcel Duchamp (1920) by Man RaySound and Music

Man Ray and Marcel Duchamp

When artists Man Ray and Marcel Duchamp first met in 1915, the pair ended up playing an impromptu game of tennis. Man Ray was quoted as saying: “Duchamp didn’t speak English and my French was non-existent… in order to have a conversation I would give a name to each pass and each time Duchamp would reply in English with ‘yes’.”

By Gordon CosterLIFE Photo Collection

The pair found common ground in their shared independent spirits and sense of freedom, as well as a passion for chess. Man Ray and Duchamp’s creative processes were also similar in the way that both artists tried to undermine artistic conventions. In particular, Man Ray’s taste for using objects and experimenting with language was inspired by Duchamp.

Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat (1985) by Michael HalsbandSCAD Museum of Art

Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat

When Andy Warhol met fellow artist Jean-Michel Basquiat in 1982, he wrote in his diary: “He’s just one of those kids who drives me crazy.” Despite this first impression, the two artists forged a close personal and professional relationship that lasted throughout the 80s. It’s said during this time the pair did everything together, like catching cabs to each other’s studios, getting breakfast, working, and partying together.

The 32-year age gap never got in the way and with Basquiat, Warhol even returned to painting, with the two collaborating on a series of works. First Warhol painted the canvas and then Basiquat would overlay his signature scribbles and imagery. However, the paintings weren’t well-received and even Warhol questioned whether they “got better” after Basquiat’s additions. Still the pair were the epitome of the the 1980s New York art scene and were a fusion of creative experimentation and genuine friendship.

Grandma Moses, Artist (1947-07) by Gene SmithLIFE Photo Collection

Grandma Moses and Norman Rockwell

Artist Norman Rockwell’s friendship with outsider artist Grandma Moses (AKA Anna Mary Robertson Moses) is one of the most charming. Grandma Moses began painting at the age of 78 and she lived on a farm nearby to Rockwell when he left New York City for Arlington, Vermont.

Norman Rockwell in his studio with "Murder in Mississippi" (1965) by Louis Lamone, Copyright © 1965 Norman Rockwell Family Agency. Norman Rockwell Art Collection TrustNorman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, MA

They found common ground in the subjects and themes within their work, as both depicted everyday American life and culture. The pair took on a familial relationship and spent a lot of time together. When Grandma Moses turned 88 in 1948, Rockwell delivered an enormous birthday cake to her house, a mark of affection for his fellow artist.

Portrait of Francis Bacon (1976). (1909-10-28/1992-04-28)The Little Museum of Dublin

Lucian Freud and Francis Bacon

Artists Lucian Freud and Francis Bacon met during the 1940s and for the next 25 years they saw each other almost every day. When they weren’t painting together, the pair spent a lot of their time at the Gargoyle Club in London’s Soho, drinking, gambling, and sometimes, arguing. On one gambling occasion, Freud lost everything, including his car. Bacon was just as reckless and was often seen throwing money at people who asked for it and buying extravagant rounds of drinks, shouting: “Champagne for my real friends – real pain for my sham friends!”

When working in the studio, Bacon and Freud constantly criticized each others' work. Bacon was once quoted as saying: “Who can I tear to pieces, if not my friends?” The two artists were working in a figurative style, yet the fashion at the time was abstraction. Therefore, as well as debauched nights out, their friendship allowed the artists to inform each other’s paintings and develop their favored style.

Portret van Paul Cézanne (1874) by Pissarro, Camille JacobRijksmuseum

Camille Pissarro and Paul Cézanne

Camille Pissarro and Paul Cézanne met at the Académie de Charles Suisse in Paris and a friendship and collaboration soon developed between the two Impressionist artists. For Cézanne, he recognized the same rejection of tradition and academic training that characterized his own work.

Self-Portrait (Camille Pissarro, par lui-meme) (c. 1890) by Camille PissarroNational Gallery of Art, Washington DC

For Pissarro, he instantly saw Cézanne’s genius. For more than 20 years, Cézanne and Pissarro experimented with their work and developed the Impressionist style, despite criticisms from their peers.

By Gordon ParksLIFE Photo Collection

Helen Frankenthaler and Grace Hartigan

Helen Frankenthaler and Grace Hartigan forged a lasting friendship in what was primarily the "boys club" of the New York City art scene in the 1930s and 40s. Sisters in Abstract Expressionism, the artists became friends early in their careers and helped define the pillars of what we now know as feminism in art.

Ravencrest (1969) by Grace HartiganChrysler Museum of Art

There were periods of time where their friendship cooled though, like in the late 1950s when Hartigan didn’t get on with Frankenthaler’s lover Clement Greenberg, an art critic who thought Hartigan’s latest work had regressed. Yet there was resilience in their friendship and the pair always came back together eventually.

Jackson Pollock (1949-04) by Martha HolmesLIFE Photo Collection

Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning

Abstract Expressionists Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning’s friendship was one based on competition and rivalry. Kooning once said that Pollock redefined art so “new paintings” could be made again.

10Th St. Artists (1956-12) by James BurkeLIFE Photo Collection

However, after a few drinks at one of Kooning’s after show parties, he’s rumored to have said: “Bill, you betrayed it... You’re doing the figure, you’re still doing the same goddamn thing. You know you never got out of being a figure painter.” Despite these differences, the artists pushed each other beyond what they could’ve achieved working separately.

LIFE Photo Collection

Edgar Degas and Édouard Manet

In January 1862, two young painters started talking about their craft as they copied Diego Velázquez’s masterpiece, the Infanta Margarita, in the Louvre. 30 year old Édouard Manet was impressed by the skill of the 27 year old Edgar Degas, who, as the story goes, was etching his copy directly onto an engraving plate.

Édouard Manet (1870) by AnonymousDetroit Institute of Arts

The two artists became friends, despite their contrasting personalities and artistic interests. Degas’ relationship with Manet and Impressionism was to be a stormy one, but the encounter was a turning-point in Degas’ career. He helped form the loose group of the Impressionists, but because of his training, found it hard to let go of the traditions he’d been taught. As such, he wanted non-Impressionists included in their well-known exhibitions, and disliked the scandal created by the shows being wary of the labels and publicity his colleagues sought. This is partly why after the 1870s the two artists were never as close as they once were.

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The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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