THE RELEVANT QUEER: Artist, Don Bachardy Born May 18, 1934

English novelist Christopher Isherwood with his partner artist Don Bachardy photographed in New York City in 1974. Jack Mitchell : Getty Images

“Age is a reward, it’s peaceful. I wouldn’t go back to my youth for anything – except of course to be with him.”

TRQ: Don Bachardy, Born May 18, 1934

Artist Don Bachardy, life partner of writer Christopher Isherwood, was born in Los Angeles, California. While he studied at the Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles, and the Slade School of ARt in London, it was during his years at UCLA that he met Isherwood, who was thirty years his senior and already widely acclaimed as novelist and playwright. 

Isherwood introduced Bachardy to his social circle, including actor Richard Burton, artist Cecil Beaton and director Anthony Page. Celebrated by the LGBTQ community as pioneers, the two lived openly as a couple and collaborated professionally. 

Barchardy often worked with pencil ink, and his style is characterized by technical precision and an intrigue with the human body, face, and psychology. Bachardy’ s portraits of the author are featured on many of Isherwood’s novels. 

In 1961 Bachardy had his first solo exhibit at the Redfern Gallery in London, and went on to have gallery shows in LA, San Francisco, and New York. A portrait of the pair were painted by artist David Hockney in 1968. 

In 1966 Isherwood published A Single Man, and dedicated the book to Bachardy during a stormy period in their relationship. In 1973 Bachardy and Isherwood collaborated on Frankenstein: The True Story

Angelina Jolie, Joan Rivers, Tilda Swinton and Warren Beatty are just some of the celebrities who posed for Bachardy, who approached these portraits with a sense of realism that ignored any sense of fame or status. His portrait of Jerry Brown is the official gubernatorial portrait that hangs in the California State Capital Museum. 

In 1990 he published Last Drawings of Christopher Isherwood, his last portraits of his longtime lover and partner. In 2000, his book Stars in My Eyes became a best seller, and launched Bachardy to a new level of fame. In 2008, Barchardy’s relationship with Isherwood was featured in a the documentary Chris & Don: A Love Story. In 2009 fashion designer Tom Ford directed his film adaption of A Single Man, and featured Bachardy in a cameo role. 

Isherwood died in 1986. In 2014 Barchardy traveled to Berlin to speak with Katherine Bucknell, a scholar who had edited Isherwood’s journals and letters. Later describing the Bachardy’s relationship with Isherwood, Bucknell states that “They had this intimate family bond, almost like brothers,” says Bucknell from her home in London. “They took other lovers and so on, but thanks to this insoluble bond between them, they found a way to live and be happy and creative.” “Their bond was sexual, but it was also intellectual, creative and, above all, domestic,” Ms. Bucknell said. 

After Isherwood’s passing, Bachardy relied on Isherwood’s journals for comfort. He later started a relationship with an architect who was twenty-six years younger than himself, and had him move into the house he shared with Isherwood. 

Today Bachardy lives and works in Santa Monica, where he continues working. He contributes to The Christopher Isherwood Foundation, which oversees the creative legacy of the couple. 

Mr. Bachardy, left, and Mr. Isherwood in the early 1950s. Photo: Arthur Mitchell
Mr. Bachardy, left, and Mr. Isherwood in front of David Hockney’s famous 1968 portrait of the pair.Credit…Calvin Brodie
Christopher Isherwood, left and Don Bachardy in the late 1970s. The couple’s 33-year relationship is examined in an exhibition at the Schwules Museum in Berlin.Credit…Michael Childers
Mr. Bachardy, right, painting Mr. Isherwood in the early 1980s.Credit…Jack Shear
Still from Chris & Don, A Love Story Documentary
Still from Chris & Don, A Love Story Documentary
Still from Chris & Don, A Love Story Documentary
English novelist Christopher Isherwood with his partner artist Don Bachardy photographed in New York City in 1974. Jack Mitchell : Getty Images

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Sources:

WideWalls

The Guardian

L.A. Times

NY Times

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