In November 1980, Gould met artist
Andy Warhol through a mutual friend, photographer
Christopher Makos. Warhol was initially interested in Gould for professional reasons—hoping to secure advertising from Paramount Pictures in
Interview—but soon began pursuing a romantic relationship in 1981, despite Gould insisting he was not gay. The two grew close, and Warhol created a
silkscreen portrait of Gould that same year. Gould's background—old-money roots, a Harvard education, and a Hollywood career—strongly appealed to Warhol, who documented his fascination by extensively photographing him. As former
Interview editor
Bob Colacello observed, it was "a résumé that Andy couldn't resist," adding that Gould, like Warhol's former boyfriend
Jed Johnson, had a twin brother named
Jay, which further intrigued him. Colacello later wrote that to "those of us who were working with Andy at the time, it was obvious that he was suppressing the hurt of losing Jed—'Oh, Bob, it's just one less problem,' he told me unconvincingly the night Jed left, Christmas Eve of 1980—by going completely gaga over Jon Gould." Although Gould became Warhol's "romantic obsession," accounts indicate their relationship was not sexual. Gould told his close friend Katy Dobbs that his relationship with Warhol was "
asexual." Designer
Halston similarly downplayed their intimacy, remarking that "the most that ever happened in
Montauk was while Jon was taking a shower, Andy probably looked at him and got, you know, some satisfaction." Christopher Makos, who spent weekends with them, was even more direct: "I just don't think that they ever did anything. That was what Andy was moaning and groaning about." Warhol even offered 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. Another complicating factor in their relationship was that Gould remained
closeted and didn't disclose his sexuality to his family. While visiting his brother at Warhol's townhouse, Jay Gould asked him about the nature of their relationship. "He said there was no sexual contact, that they were just good friends," Gould recalled. Despite Warhol's efforts to mirror Gould's lifestyle changes, the increasing distance between them became apparent by late 1984. That December, Bob Colacello ran into Gould at E.A.T., a gourmet shop on
Madison Avenue, where he appeared healthy and was buying dried fruits. Gould said he was considering moving to the
West Coast following his friend
Frank Mancuso's appointment as president at Paramount. Allegedly, Gould was dating Mancuso's daughter and telling friends he wanted to start a family. In an effort to keep Gould close, Warhol gave him the cover story on
Shirley MacLaine in the March 1985 issue of
Interview. That year, Gould was also the subject of a portrait by Warhol's friend and collaborator
Jean-Michel Basquiat. By March 1985, however, Gould had purchased a home in
Beverly Hills formerly owned by
Joan Hackett and did not give Warhol a key. He soon sold his Manhattan apartment and relocated to California, gradually distancing himself. During a visit to New York over
Labor Day weekend in September 1985, Gould remarked to a friend that it was the first time he was not staying with Warhol—effectively signaling the end of their relationship. Warhol later noted in his diary in December 1985 that they were no longer on speaking terms. == Death ==