- Source: Jon Gould
Jon Jewell Gould (born May 7, 1953 – September 17, 1986) was an American Studio executive. Gould was the vice president of corporate communications for Paramount Pictures. He had a secret romance with artist Andy Warhol in the 1980s. Following Gould's death from AIDS, his collection of Warhol's work was shown at the Brattleboro Museum and Art Center in Vermont.
Life and career
= Early life and education
=Jon Jewell Gould was born in Amesbury, Massachusetts on May 7, 1953. Gould was born into a prominent Yankee family which has owned a 900-acre dairy farm and estate since the 1700s. Through his mother, Gould was related to Nathaniel Currier of Currier and Ives fame. He had a twin brother, Jay Gould, who is a restaurateur and investor.
After Gould graduated from New England College in 1975, he enrolled in the publishing program at Harvard University's Harvard Radcliffe Institute.
= Career
=In 1977, Gould was hired by Straight Arrow Press as the East Coast sales manager for Rolling Stone and Outside magazine. In 1978, Gould joined Paramount Pictures' Motion Picture Division as the director of marketing administration for the Marketing Group. In 1979, Gould became the executive assistant to Frank Mancuso, the executive vice president of distribution and marketing. When Mancuso was promoted to president of distribution, Gould remained his executive assistant. In 1980, Gould was appointed vice president of corporate communications for Paramount Pictures Corp. He specialized in marketing films such as Urban Cowboy (1980) and Flashdance (1983).
In 1983, Gould worked to get the Showtime network, owned by Paramount, the film rights to the Diana Ross concert in New York's Central Park.
= Relationship with Andy Warhol
=In November 1980, Gould met artist Andy Warhol at a New York gallery through a mutual friend, photographer Christopher Makos. Warhol was initially interested in meeting Gould so that he could get Paramount to advertise in Interview magazine. Warhol soon began to pursue a romantic relationship with Gould in 1981, but Gould told him that he was not gay. The two men began spending more time together and Warhol made a silkscreen portrait of Gould in 1981.
Gould had a certain pedigree that attracted the artist, becoming the most photographed subject of Warhol's later career. As former Interview editor Bob Colacello wrote in the book Holy Terror: Andy Warhol Close Up, "Old money, Harvard, Hollywood it was a résumé that Andy couldn't resist. And there was something else about Jon Gould that drew Andy toward him: like Jed Johnson, [Warhol's previous boyfriend] he had a twin brother named Jay." "To those of us who were working with Andy at the time, it was obvious that he was suppressing the hurt of losing Jed ... by going completely gaga over Jon Gould," Colacello wrote in an article for Air Mail.
Although Gould was Warhol's "romantic obsession," they likely did not have a sexual relationship. Warhol made an offer to give Makos a Jaeger-LeCoultre watch if he could get Gould to sleep with him. "He said, if you get me a boyfriend, I will get you the watch. So I got him the boyfriend, and I said, time to pay up. He said, well, nothing's happened yet," said Makos. Gould also told another friend that his relationship with Warhol was "asexual." As a result, he had relations with other men and frequented the gay baths.
An issue of complexity was that Gould was closeted and had not come out about his sexuality. Therefore, their intimate relationship was concealed from his family. By 1983, Gould moved into Warhol's townhouse on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, where he had his own room. Because Gould didn't want to receive mail at Warhol's townhouse, he purchased an apartment with assistance from Warhol at the Hotel des Artistes on Manhattan's Upper West Side. Jay Gould recalled that when he visited his brother at Warhol's home he asked him about the nature of their relationship: "He said there was no sexual contact, that they were just good friends." After Gould's mother died in 2019, his family discovered his romance with Warhol through letters his mother had kept.
Gould was admitted to New York Hospital with pneumonia on February 4, 1984. Although Warhol had visited him in the hospital, after his release, Warhol instructed his housekeepers to wash Gould's clothes separately from his. In an attempt to keep Gould near, Warhol gave Gould the cover story on Shirley MacLaine in the March 1985 issue of Interview magazine. Gould had his portrait painted by Warhol's collaborator Jean-Michel Basquiat in 1985.
In March 1985, Gould purchased the former home of actress Joan Hackett in Beverly Hills and moved to California for work. Subsequently, he sold his apartment on the West Side of Manhattan. He gradually distanced himself from Warhol and they were no longer on speaking terms by the end of 1985.
Death
Gould died of AIDS-related pneumonia at the age of 33 in Los Angeles on September 17, 1986. Warhol's collaborator Pat Hackett noted in The Andy Warhol Diaries that at the time of his death, Gould "was down to seventy pounds and he was blind. He denied even to close friends that he had AIDS." He is buried at Bartlett Cemetery in Amesbury, Massachusetts.
Legacy
In September 2004, the exhibition "Andy Warhol: The Jon Gould Collection" was mounted at the Brattleboro Museum and Art Center in Brattleboro, Vermont. The show consisted of 45 paintings and drawings, 20 prints, and 50 photographs taken by Warhol. Gould also had works by artists Jean-Michel Basquiat, Robert Rauschenberg, Marc Chagall, and Keith Haring.
In January 2018, Gould's alma mater New England College announced The "Jon Gould '75 Legacy Challenge." Two alumni, Gould's twin brother Jay Gould and Lex Scourby pledged a combined $1 Million towards the construction of The Rosamond Page Putnam Center for the Performing Arts. Jay Gould '75 has made his pledge for $500,000, in memory of Jon Gould and the lobby will be named in honor of him.
In 2022, Gould's relationship with Warhol was explored in the Netflix docuseries The Andy Warhol Diaries.
References
Sources
Warhol, Andy; Hackett, Pat (1989). The Andy Warhol Diaries. Warner Books. ISBN 9780446514262.
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