Best Buddies
Keith Haring completed his final print series, “Best Buddies,” just 10 days before dying from AIDS-related complications in 1990. The “Best Buddies” motif, which first appeared in Haring’s work in 1987, depicts two figures hugging, with rays emanating from their embrace. Like many of Haring’s iconic symbols, “Best Buddies” is purposefully uncomplicated, inviting viewers to create their own interpretations of the scene. Haring’s figures have no specified race, gender, or sexual orientation, and they instead appear as anonymous emblems of universal love and acceptance. Haring dedicated the motif to Best Buddies, a charity that assists people living with developmental disabilities—and the organization has continued to use this image as its logo ever since. Embodying Haring’s guiding philosophies about art and activism, “Best Buddies” is a primary example of the artist’s enduring impact on the social justice causes that animated his career and life.
Series by this artist
- Pop Shop129 available
- Icons121 available
- Bearbrick37 available
- Radiant Baby34 available
- Barking Dogs31 available
- Subway Drawings26 available
- Andy Mouse21 available
- Activist Posters21 available
- Fertility21 available
- Dance19 available
- Blueprint Drawings13 available
- Lucky Strike11 available
- Best Buddies11 available
- The Story of Red and Blue10 available
- Apocalypse10 available
- UFOs5 available
- Bad Boys8 works