
Robert Longo
196
Works
11
Followers
Collectors
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Chuck Close

Close shared Longo's commitment to monumental scale and hyperrealistic portraiture rendered with intense labor intensive technique. Both artists elevated the human face and figure into commanding, almost overwhelming pictorial presences.

Eric Fischl

Fischl emerged alongside Longo in the 1980s New York scene with a shared focus on the psychological undercurrents of American suburban and urban life. Both artists depict the human figure in ways that expose tension, anxiety, and cultural unease.

Gerhard Richter

Richter's photo based paintings share Longo's interrogation of photographic imagery as a source for monochrome dramatic compositions that address violence, memory, and mass media culture. Both artists transform documentary source material into monumental works of fine art.
Artists who inspired them

Cindy Sherman

Sherman's appropriation of cinematic and media derived imagery to critique identity and representation directly informed the conceptual framework behind Longo's figure work. Her influence as a fellow Pictures Generation artist shaped his approach to performance, photography, and staged imagery.

Francis Bacon

Bacon's raw visceral depictions of the human body under psychological and physical stress were a foundational influence on Longo's interest in capturing extreme bodily states and tension. The confrontational power of Bacon's figures resonates directly in the contorted poses of Men in the Cities.

Andy Warhol

Warhol's treatment of mass media icons, celebrity, and consumer culture as subject matter for fine art set a precedent that Longo extended into his own investigations of American power and spectacle. Warhol's use of mechanical reproduction and popular imagery as critical tools shaped Longo's conceptual approach.








