February 27, 2024 | Christine Tran

Heartbreaking Facts About Tragic Artists


“Tragedy is the greatest art form of all. It gives us the courage to continue with our life by exposing us to the pain of life. It is unsentimental, it takes us seriously as human beings, it is not condescending. Paradoxically, by seeing pain we are made greater, it becomes a need".—Howard Baker.

Great art and greater pain go together in our culture like peanut butter and jelly. Or at least that’s how the story goes. More people have come forward to critique how quick the assumptions that pain is a prerequisite for artistic achievement. Certainly, pain that actually hurts people (or worse) is not the price we must pay to have good novels, paintings, songs, and movies. But as one reads through the history of artists across all fields, pain becomes a suspiciously reoccurring theme. But does the world really need help from art to make artists suffer? Paint a depressing picture to these 41 heartbreaking facts about tragic artists.


1. A Little Bit of Sympathy

Aristocratic inbreeding came hard for the Post-Impressionist French artist Henri Marie Raymond de Toulouse-Lautrec. Born to wealthy first cousins in 1864, Toulouse-Lautrec inherited a disease that stunted the growth of his legs. His adult height was just 5 feet tall. Struggling with his turmoil, he found an obsession in the "green fairy", a euphemism for a notorious green elixir. During his 36 years of life, Toulouse-Lautrec also became as a leading name in art for his empathetic treatment of tawdry subjects, such as cabaret, in Parisian life.

Advertisement

 Tragic Artists

Advertisement

2. Fitzgerald in Flames

It’s a shame that people remember Zelda Fitzgerald as simply the wife of F. Scott. The socialist was also a writer and dancer in her own right, sharing her husband’s artistic preferences. But she also shared his instabilities. A history of mental issues, not helped by her failing marriage, put her in the Highland Mental Hospital in 1936, where Zelda stayed for 12 years.

Advertisement

When the hospital caught fire in 1948, it took Zelda with it.

The Legend of Zelda FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

3. When Art Becomes the End of Life

John Berryman's poetry often grapples with his father's abrupt departure from life. In the winter of 1971, the lines between life and art blurred when Berryman himself tragically jumped from the Washington Avenue Bridge, resulting in his abrupt departure as well.

Advertisement

The poet, despite being a laureate of the National Book Award, Pulitzer Prize, and Bolingen Prize, could not avoid the inevitable transition from existence to non-existence.

Tragic Artists FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

4. A Spotless End

Anne Sexton continues to be one of the most influential English-language poets from the 20th century. But the method of her self-inflicted demise was eerily stylized:

Advertisement

before she intentionally succumbed to carbon monoxide intoxication, Sexton dressed herself in her mother's coat, filled a glass with a stiff drink, and removed all the rings from her fingers.

Tragic Artists FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

5. Last Word

The body of writer Richard Brautigan wasn't discovered until some time after his self-inflicted departure. As a result, we don’t know the exact date and manner, other than the fact that he took his own life with a .44 Magnum.

Advertisement

It took a private investigator to find his decomposed body in October 1984. In a manner tragically befitting his legendary wit, Brautigan's final note before his demise read, "Messy, isn't it"?

Tragic Artists FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

6. A Most Maternal Labor

John Kennedy Toole departed this life without having any of his works published. However, his mother was determined to posthumously publish his manuscript A Confederacy of Dunces. Thanks to her efforts, the book was printed and even won the Pulitzer Prize.

Advertisement

We hope it brought some comfort, considering the situation regarding Toole's fate; he ended his own life in 1969.

Tragic Artists FactsFlickr, Allison Meier

Advertisement

7. All for Naught

Fame could not buy a new bone marrow for rapper Nelly’s sister, Jackie Donahue. The two launched the “Jes Us 4 Jackie” campaign to find a donor for the singer’s sibling. Despite their efforts, the campaign failed to find a match, and Donahue succumbed to leukemia in 2004.

Advertisement

Tragic Artists FactsShutterstock

Advertisement

8. Premature Separation

Prince's only child with his first wife, Mayte Garcia, lost his life at the tender age of one week. The child, Boy Gregory, was not only premature, but he was also diagnosed with a rare skull defect called Pfeiffer syndrome. The grief was just too much for the couple and they had the marriage annulled on their next wedding anniversary.

Advertisement

Tragic Artists FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

9. Drowned Sorrow

Virginia Woolf had a history of suicidal depression, her first attempt to take her own life happened at the age of 22. Almost 40 years later, in 1941, she made her final attempt: the novelist put on her coat, filled it with heavy stones, and walked into the Ouse River.

Advertisement

In her farewell note to her husband Leonard, she wrote, "Everything has disappeared from my existence, except for the certainty of your kindess". I can’t go on spoiling your life any longer. I don’t think two people could have been happier than we have been. V".

Aphra Behn factsGetty Images

Advertisement
Factinate

Sign up to our newsletter.

History’s most fascinating stories and darkest secrets, delivered to your inbox daily. Making distraction rewarding since 2017.

Thank you!
Error, please try again.

10. Miss Mom

Shania Twain grew up in a poor and stormy household.

Advertisement

Things only deteriorated when both of her parents were tragically lost in a head-on collision when she was just 22 years old. At an age when most of us are just graduating college, Twain found herself the guardian and breadwinner for her three teenaged siblings. More fortunately, she moved the family to Huntsville, Ontario, where her job as a singer for the Deerhurst Resort put them on the path to raising their fortunes.

Advertisement

Shania Twain FactsShutterstock

Advertisement

11. An Understandable Pause

In October 2008, Dreamgirls Oscar-winner Jennifer Hudson had to cancel her publicity tour for a series of family tragedies. First, her mother fell ill - but that was not the worst of it. Her mother Darnell and brother Jason were found to have tragically lost their lives, and her 7-year-old nephew Jason was declared missing.

Advertisement

This did not have a happy ending: only three days later, Jason’s body was discovered in a stolen SUV. The estranged husband of Jennifer’s sister is currently serving three consecutive life sentences for their murders. Hudson herself would not return to public life until the February 2009 Super Bowl.

Advertisement

2019's Cats factsGetty Images

Advertisement

12. Don’t Mess with Furiosa’s Mom

Before she was charming screens and winning acting awards for her craft, Charlize Theron grew up with an abusive father in South Africa. In her youth, her father used to come home inebriated and would unsettle Theron and her mother with his alarming demeanor. He began to shoot at them through a door.

Advertisement

Theron's mother retaliated, successfully neutralizing Theron's father in self-defense right in front of her.

'Young Adult' World PremiereGetty Images

Advertisement

13. Field Day

The passing of Vincent Van Gogh, which was self-inflicted, is one of the more famous deaths in art history. After a lifelong struggle with depression, the 37-year-old painter walked out into an open field and tragically inflicted a solitary self-inflicted wound to his own chest.

Advertisement

However, it took him two more days to reach his end—he actually made it back to his own bedroom.

Vincent Van Gogh FactsWikipedia

Advertisement

14. Not a Misfire

Ernest Hemingway's wife Mary would persistently claim that her husband's demise was "accidental". But it was apparently different to everyone else: the author had shot himself in the head after a long spell of physical and mental illness.

Advertisement

The account of unintentional fatality—while he was polishing his firearm—was likely circulated due to the prevailing prejudice towards mental health issues.

Pulitzer Prize Winners FactsWikipedia

Advertisement

15. True Colors

Jean-Michel Basquiat secured early membership in the "27 Club". This Haitian-American painter created waves in the 1980s, being amongst the few black artists acknowledged within public painting movements.

Advertisement

However, he grappled with a serious dependency on narcotics. Despite his close ties with '80s cultural icons such as David Bowie, Andy Warhol, and Madonna, the painter tragically succumbed to excessive substance use on August 12, 1988.

Jean-Michel Basquiat FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

16. An Opiate a Day Keeps Mom at Bay

This might shock you know but the author behind Confessions of an Opium-Eater (1821) was an opium addict with mother issues! Thomas de Quincey’s mom pulled him out of school for three years to stop him from getting “egotistical". When he resumed his studies, he felt disconnected and spent much of his young adulthood engaging in excessive consumption of certain substances while avoiding his family.

Advertisement

This was far from the usual college student's life.

Tragic Artists factsWikipedia

Advertisement

17. The Pain in Painter

Jackson Pollock’s personal life was as rocky as the textures of his paintings. He was an alcoholic and a serial adulterer, traits which drove his wife away to Paris. In 1956, the demise of the artist occurred due to a car crash while he was under the influence, driving.

Advertisement

While one of the passengers perished alongside him, the other—his mistress and fellow artist Ruth Kligman—survived.

Best Investments FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

18. Not in The Doctor’s Orders

Making art took its toll on Mark Rothko’s body. Diagnosed with an aneurysm in 1968, the painter was issued medical instructions to avoid drinking, inhaling harmful substances, or painting anything taller than a yard in height.

Advertisement

 Rothko blatantly ignored every piece of advice except for the painting, which resulted in newer, small form works. Regrettably, the disease may have inflicted a severe mental strain on Rothko; he was found two years later, having seemingly succumbed to self-inflicted harm. He left no note.

Tragic Artists FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

19. For the Children

Keith Haring transformed the way that New York art nerds would think about graffito.

Advertisement

His murals were used to give children a creative purpose. But he was tragically diagnosed with AIDS in 1987. Haring would devote the last three years of his life to producing as much art as he could and establishing the Keith Haring Foundation to raise awareness and promote AIDS advocacy.

Advertisement

People Who Died Young factsGetty Images

Advertisement

20. An Uncertain Demise

Painter Egon Schiele was one of the 20 million people who perished under the Spanish Influenza outbreak of 1918. His wife Edith, six months into her pregnancy, ceased to live three days prior to him. Schiele spent his solitary final days frantically producing as much art as he could, including a sketch of his wife's lifeless body, before he too passed.

Advertisement

Tragic Artists FactsWikimedia Commons

Advertisement

21. Leave on a High Note

In 1903, French artist Paul Gaugin, at the age of 54, met his end due to an apparent overuse of morphine just as he was slated to start a term of confinement.

Tragic Artists FactsWikipedia

Advertisement

22. Better Late Than Never

The contorted, deliberately off-putting styles of “El Greco” were not the rage of Renaissance Spain. He was ambitious and devoted, but his life tragically ended without much recognition at the age of 22 years old on April 7, 1614.

Advertisement

It would be 250 years until mainstream painters revisited and revered his work for what it was.

Tragic Artists FactsFlickr, Tim Adams

Advertisement

23. Unburied, Unbankable

Despite his contemporary success and respect from book nerds, Oscar Wilde met a tragic end, completely bankrupt in a Paris hotel room in 1900. His funds were depleted due to the cost of lawyer's fees, as he had recently experienced a trial, conviction, and incarceration for homosexuality.

Advertisement

Oscar Wilde factsWikipedia

Advertisement

24. No Rest for the Beautiful

Elizabeth Siddal is best remembered as the drowned model in that legendary painting, Ophelia. She departed this life while still young, and was not to be left in tranquility: her husband, the painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti, made an attempt at poetry and laid her along with a manuscript of his works.

Advertisement

Seven years later, he decided he wanted to publish those poems. Thus, he had Siddal’s body exhumed for his artist sacrifice.

Muses FactsWikimedia Commons

Advertisement

25. Good Grief

Peanuts creator Charles Schultz lost his father in the same year that his original cartooning studio burned to the ground.

Tragic Artists factsWikipedia

Advertisement

26. Beyond The Bars

Leighton Meester has much less of a charmed past than her Gossip Girl character. For one, the actress was born to an inmate mother.

Advertisement

Meester's mom had been apprehended for smuggling 1,200 pounds of marijuana out of Jamaica. Many relatives were in on the operation; Meester’s aunt broke out and became the first woman ever to make the US Marshals 15 Most Wanted List. Meester’s own parents would divorce and she would be raised by her grandmother.

Famous People FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

27. A Cent Alone

50 Cent was orphaned under horrible circumstances.

Advertisement

When he was 8 years old, his mother, Sabrina, became a drug dealer to support them after his father’s abandonment. One day, someone drugged her unconscious, closed all the windows in their home, and turned on the gas, which ultimately ended her life. He went on to live with grandparents, but he became a drug dealer himself by the age of 12.

Advertisement

A trip to boot camp—and getting shot nine times—apparently pushed 50 Cent forward to improve his prospects and pursue a successful rap career.

50 Cent FactsShutterstock

Advertisement

28. Whomst Dunnit?

Christopher Marlowe's departure from this world at the age of 29 was cloaked in both tragedy and mystery. Marlowe was a contemporary of Shakespeare. He is also, sometimes, cited by conspiracy theorists as the real progenitor of the Bard’s iconic work. What is certain?

Advertisement

The ambiguity surrounding his demise: in 1593, it was reported that Marlowe was "pierced fatally by a licentious attendant, an adversary of his in his lascivious love". Yet others have mentioned that his life was lost in a less dramatic drunken brawl.Adding to the intrigue, the playwright's tragically premature departure came following his arrest for alleged involvement in libels against Protestant refugees from France.

Advertisement

Charles V factsGetty Images

Advertisement

29. A Medicalized Star Is Born

Ringo Starr certainly one of the more controversial Beatles. His journey to fame originated from a childhood marked by distressing medical experiences; various issues warranted Starr to spend a cumulative two years in the hospital when he was a child. At one point, after a six-month stay in hospice, the young Starr reached down to show a friend his toy on the ground.

Advertisement

This friendly act ripped apart his stiches, which put him in the hospital for another six months. Can we blame him for dropping out of school at age 13? He had enough pain to last a lifetime.

Ringo Starr FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

30. Strums Not Guns

American rocker Tom Petty suffered through a childhood of harsh treatment by his father.

Advertisement

Petty's dad justified his harsh treatment by asserting he did not understand why his son was more engaged in arts and music rather than hunting.

Tom Petty FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

31. The Answer Is a Needle in the Hay

Elliot Smith struggled with mental health issues all his life, stemming from a troubled childhood with his stepfather. He tragically ended his life at the age of 34 under uncertain circumstances, suspected to be self-inflicted.

Advertisement

According to his girlfriend, Jennifer Chiba, the two had been arguing when Chiba locked herself in the bathroom for a shower. Chiba then heard a scream. She discovered Smith with a sharp object embedded in his chest and removed it. He had left a note, and the coroner categorized the incident as "self-inflicted" with foul play as an open possibility. His posthumous albums were released to continued critical acclaim.

Advertisement

Tragic Lives Of Musicians FactsWikimedia Commons

Advertisement

32. Why Can’t We Be Friends?

In 1995, hip-hop master Easy-E, aged only 30, checked himself into the hospital for what he believed to be asthma symptoms a year. The reality was much direr; they diagnosed him with AIDS. While he departed just one month later, Easy-E devoted the final part of his life to reconcile with rivals such as Ice Cube, Snoop Dog, and Dr.

Advertisement

Dre.

Ice Cube factsFlickr, Edward Reyes

Advertisement

33. When the Song Stopped

The name "Buddy Holly" is so synonymous with that joyful '50s rock and roll, it's startling to remember that the musician's life was cut short at the tender age of 22. On February 3, 1959, the singer succumbed to a tragic plane crash alongside Ritchie Valens and J.

Advertisement

P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson. This tragedy would become known as "The Day the Music Came to an End".

People Who Died Young factsWikipedia

Advertisement

34. Viking Burial for Bysshe

Percy Bysshe Shelley involved himself in enough tragic things—like friendship with Lord Byron—to fill his own list. But his life came to a grim conclusion in 1822, when the writer drowned in while sailing on the Gulf of Spezia.

Advertisement

Some literary conspiracy theorists claim he delicately took his own life at sea. His widow, Mary Shelley, would insist the boat simply wasn’t seaworthy. In either case, Shelley was just one month shy of his 30th birthday. When the body was cremated, everything burned except for his heart, which had calcified.

Advertisement

Instead of burying it, Mary Shelley wrapped the heart in a silken shroud, and supposedly carried it with her almost everywhere she went. A year after she breathed her last, the heart was unearthed in her desk, encased in the pages of one of Percy's concluding poems.

Advertisement

Historical Mistresses FactsWikipedia

Advertisement

35. Poor Poetess

During her lifetime, Sylvia Plath was a prodigious poet as well as the author of the classic semi-autobiographical novel, The Bell Jar. While her character in The Bell Jar ends the novel somewhat hopeful about recovery, Plath’s real-life struggles with mental illness did not end so brightly; in addition to long-running mental health issues—including a stay with a mental institution where she underwent electroshock therapy—Plath’s husband fellow poet Ted Hughes was physically abusive and unfaithful to her. After their separation in 1962, Plath took her own life by putting her head in a kitchen oven.

Advertisement

With her children were sleeping in the next room, Plath put wet towels under the doorways in order to spare them from the deadly fumes.

Sylvia Plath FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

36. Persona Non Grata

The tragedy of Sylvia Plath did not cease with her demise. Following her departure from this world in 1962, her abusive husband Ted Hughes inherited full control of her final word.

Advertisement

His posthumous publication of her manuscript Ariel (1966) was met with criticism for its suspicious omissions; other were not happy that Plath’s gravestone bore Hughes’s last name.

People Who Died Young factsFlickr

Advertisement

37. Brothers & Sisters

Not unlike his plays, the life of Tennessee Williams was ripe with family tragedy. He grew up close to his older sister Rose.

Advertisement

Unfortunately, Rose suffered from schizophrenia. Into adulthood, Rose’s behavior grew more erratic until their parents saw fit to have her lobotomized in 1943. Williams would be riddled with guilt for not being there, and he would finance Rose’s care for the rest of his own life.

Tragic Artists FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

38. A Streetcar Named Asphyxiation

By the 1980s, Tennessee Williams had developed a tranquilizer addiction.

Advertisement

In 1983, the medications he had been consuming greatly relaxed his gag reflex, thus preventing him from expelling the pill cap he had inadvertently ingested.

Tennessee WilliamsGetty Images

Advertisement

39. What If Frasier Was an Endless Greek Tragedy

Frasier star Kelsey Grammer has lost many close family members of his to separate violent tragedies. His father, Frank Grammer Jr., was fatally wounded by a complete stranger.

Advertisement

When Grammer was 20, his sister was abducted and tragically lost her life at the hands of criminals who were involved in a theft at Red Lobster, where she was a witness. And just five years after that, his two half-brothers, Billy and Stephen, met their untimely end due to a scuba malfunction.

Advertisement

One of the brothers was most likely consumed by sharks. It’s pretty amazing that Grammer was able to make  people laugh for 20 years on Cheers and Frasier.

Kelsey Grammer FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

40. Sick of It

Today, Frida Kahlo is remembered for her invigorating and revolutionary art. But less remembered is how the last five years of her life were a painful, violent struggle with mental and physical illness.

Advertisement

In 1950 alone, Kahlo endured seven medical operations, including the amputation of her leg. Despite having just recovered from pneumonia, Kahlo made one last public appearance at a Guatemalan protest against US occupation. When she returned home, her condition worsened. Some people speculate that Kahlo's departure from life on July 18, 1954, wasn't due to her illness but instead a voluntary act of self-harm.

Advertisement

Tragic Artists FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

41. Heights of Tragedy

The Franco-Italian painter Amedeo Modigliani was not alone on his journey to the grave. The 35-year-old contemporary of Picasso succumbed to tubercular meningitis on January 24, 1920. His widow—who was eight months pregnant with their second child—tragically took her own life by leaping from a window only a single day later.

Tragic Artists FactsGetty Images

Advertisement

Sources:

Advertisement

1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31


More from Factinate

Featured Article

My mom never told me how her best friend died. Years later, I was using her phone when I made an utterly chilling discovery.

Dark Family Secrets

Dark Family Secrets Exposed

Nothing stays hidden forever—and these dark family secrets are proof that when the truth comes out, it can range from devastating to utterly chilling.
April 8, 2020 Samantha Henman

Featured Article

Madame de Pompadour was the alluring chief mistress of King Louis XV, but few people know her dark history—or the chilling secret shared by her and Louis.

Madame de Pompadour Facts

Entrancing Facts About Madame de Pompadour, France's Most Powerful Mistress

Madame de Pompadour was the alluring chief mistress of King Louis XV, but few people know her dark history—or the chilling secret shared by her and Louis.
December 7, 2018 Kyle Climans

More from Factinate

Featured Article

I tried to get my ex-wife served with divorce papers. I knew that she was going to take it badly, but I had no idea about the insane lengths she would go to just to get revenge and mess with my life.

These People Got Genius Revenges

When someone really pushes our buttons, we'd like to think that we'd hold our head high and turn the other cheek, but revenge is so, so sweet.
April 22, 2020 Scott Mazza

Featured Article

Catherine of Aragon is now infamous as King Henry VIII’s rejected queen—but few people know her even darker history.

Catherine of Aragon Facts

Tragic Facts About Catherine of Aragon, Henry VIII’s First Wife

Catherine of Aragon is now infamous as King Henry VIII’s rejected queen—but very few people know her even darker history.
June 7, 2018 Christine Tran



Dear reader,


Want to tell us to write facts on a topic? We’re always looking for your input! Please reach out to us to let us know what you’re interested in reading. Your suggestions can be as general or specific as you like, from “Life” to “Compact Cars and Trucks” to “A Subspecies of Capybara Called Hydrochoerus Isthmius.” We’ll get our writers on it because we want to create articles on the topics you’re interested in. Please submit feedback to contribute@factinate.com. Thanks for your time!


Do you question the accuracy of a fact you just read? At Factinate, we’re dedicated to getting things right. Our credibility is the turbo-charged engine of our success. We want our readers to trust us. Our editors are instructed to fact check thoroughly, including finding at least three references for each fact. However, despite our best efforts, we sometimes miss the mark. When we do, we depend on our loyal, helpful readers to point out how we can do better. Please let us know if a fact we’ve published is inaccurate (or even if you just suspect it’s inaccurate) by reaching out to us at contribute@factinate.com. Thanks for your help!


Warmest regards,



The Factinate team




Want to learn something new every day?

Join thousands of others and start your morning with our Fact Of The Day newsletter.

Thank you!

Error, please try again.