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Core Art Standards: VA1, VA2, VA11

CCSS: R2, R3, R10

An Artist’s Best Friend(s)

Stereotypes often label artists as quirky. In many cases, that applies to their choice of pets too. Read on to learn about four artists and their weird animal kingdom companions—many of which inspired, or are featured in, famous artworks!

Salvador Dalí with pet ocelot, 1965. Photo credit: Roger Higgins. Library of Congress via Wikipedia.

As pets, ocelots can require a lot of attention . . . a bit like Dalí himself!

SALVADOR DALÍ

An ocelot named Babou

Dalí brought his ocelot, a South American wildcat, everywhere. Once in a New York City restaurant, Babou startled a fellow customer. Dalí playfully explained that Babou was nothing more than a regular house cat that he’d painted to look like a leopard!

Frida Kahlo, Self-Portrait with Small Monkeys, 1945. Oil on Masonite. ©2024 Banco de México Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico, D.F./Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY. Photo: Schalkwijk/Art Resource, NY.

Kahlo adds another layer of identity to her self-portraits by including her pets.

FRIDA KAHLO

Monkeys and parrots and deer, oh my!

Kahlo spent much of her life confined to her bed, struggling with her health. She loved animals and, since she was often unable to go out, she filled her home with animal friends. Many of them appear in her paintings. Her favorites included spider monkey Fulang Chang, Mexican hairless dog Señor Xolotl, parrot Bonito, eagle Gertrudis Caca Blanca, and fawn Granizo.

Andy Warhol (1928-1987), 25 Cats Named Sam and One Blue Pussy, 1954. One lithograph. ©Phillips Auctioneers Limited. ©2024 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc./Licensed by Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY.

This print shows one of Warhol’s 24 cats named Sam.

ANDY WARHOL (AND HIS MOM!)

Cats . . . a lot of them

In the 1950s, American pop artist Warhol and his mother had 25 cats: One was named Hester, and the rest were all named Sam. In 1954, the mother-son team published a book of Warhol’s drawings of the cats, accompanied by his mother’s calligraphy.

David Douglas Duncan Papers and Photography Collection, ©Harry Ransom Center, The University of Texas at Austin.

Picasso and Lump lived together for six years.

PABLO PICASSO

A dog named Lump

Lump originally belonged to one of Picasso’s friends. When the two met, it was clear Lump’s heart belonged to Picasso. The artist adopted Lump, and their relationship was often described as a love affair. Lump died in 1973, just one week before Picasso.

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