
(July 27, 1926 – January 4, 2011)

After publishing his first novel, Circles, in 1962, a story based on life in the art world in New York City and The Hamptons, he left the real estate business to focus on his writing.[1] He wrote Jackson Pollock: Energy Made Visible, published in 1972, a book considered to be the first biography of the artist and called "a book that everyone interested in the social history of modern art will want to read" by reviewer Hilton Kramer in The New York Times.[2][1] Frustrated by perceived snubs from the major book publishing firms, he joined other authors, such as Mark Jay Mirsky and Ronald Sukenick, to form the Fiction Collective in 1974, a not-for-profit publishing group intended to "make serious novels and story collections available in simultaneous hard and quality paper editions" and to "keep them in print permanently."[3] Friedman's 1978 book Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney: A Biography provided an account of the life of the artist, art collector and patron of the arts. His 2006 autobiographical account Tripping recounts his experiences using psychedelic drugs together with Timothy Leary.[1]
Friedman died in Manhattan at the age of 84 on January 4, 2011, due to pneumonia. He was survived by a daughter, a son and two grandchildren. His wife Abby died in 2003. His younger brother, novelist Sanford Friedman, was born in 1928 and died in 2010.[1]
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