He was born in Reading, Pennsylvania but grew up in Kutztown and was interested in art from an early age. From 1976 to 1978 he studied graphic design at The Ivy School of Professional Art, a commercial and fine art school in Pittsburgh. Keith moved to New York City where he was greatly inspired by the graffiti art, and additionally studied at the School of Visual Arts. Many of his works as a graffiti/pop artist show homoerotic themes.
He achieved his first public attention with his chalk drawings in the subways of New York. The exhibitions were put on film by the photographer Tseng Kwong Chi. At this time, "The Radiant Baby" also became his symbol. Starting in 1980, he organized exhibitions in Club 57. He participated in the Times Square exhibition and drew for the first time animals and human faces. In 1981 he sketched his first chalk drawings on black paper and painted plastic, metal and found objects.
He contributed in the New York New Wave display. He met with the graffiti artist L.A. II (Angel Oritz). Following that, he had his first exclusive exhibition in the Tony Shafrazi Gallery. That same year, Haring took part of Documenta 7 in Kassel, Germany. He took part in the Whitney Biennial in 1983, as well as the São Paulo Biennial. He got to know Andy Warhol; Warhol was also the theme of several of Keith Haring's pieces including "Andy Mouse".
In 1984, he painted wall murals in Melbourne (such as the 1984 'Detail-Mural at Collingwood College, Victoria' that is unfortunately due for demolition), Sydney, Rio de Janeiro, Minneapolis and Manhattan. In 1985 he began to paint canvas. Simultaneously, the Museum of Modern Art in Bordeaux opened an exhibition of his works, and he took part in the Paris Biennial. In 1986 Haring painted murals in Amsterdam, Paris, Phoenix and in Berlin on the Berlin Wall at Checkpoint Charlie. He painted the body of Grace Jones for her video "I'm Not Perfect."
He had his own exhibitions in 1987 in Helsinki and Antwerp, among others. Haring's imagery has become a universally recognized visual language of the 20th century. The Keith Haring Foundation, established in 1989, continues Keith's legacy of giving to children's organizations.
In June 1989, on the rear wall of the convent of the Church of Sant'Antonio in Pisa, he painted the last public work of his life, the mural "Tuttomondo".
Keith Haring died in 1990 of an HIV (AIDS)-related disease. He had been diagnosed HIV positive two years earlier.
Keith Haring thought that everyone should be able to see art and enjoy it, with this in mind he started drawing in public. Down in the New York subway there were large areas of black paper where advert posters normally went, Keith thought this was the perfect surface for drawing on and set to work with white chalks drawing his unique, faceless characters. The passers by seemed to respect the pictures and even though the chalk drawings were fragile and could easily have been smudged they remained untouched!
Keith began to build up a set of characters that frequently appeared in his art work; a dog, a crawling baby, flying saucers, pyramids and winged animals. Each character represented something different, his most popular figure, the baby, symbolised, "life, energy, happiness and the positive side of humanity." His figures were often interwoven with other things to make fantasy creatures like computers with heads or an animal with several faces! His drawings were surrounded by kinetic (movement) lines so his work had a really vibrant, frantic feel to them.

His art covered all his different interests like break dancing, graffiti and music. He would watch break dancers and freeze a moment in his mind then turn it into a painting!
Keith liked to go with the flow when it came to creating art, "If it drips…it happens. It doesn't take anything from the work. The dripping proves that you weren't trying to control the work, but the work was developing by itself and if it drips it's just a natural part in the evolution of the art."
His simple style had great appeal for kids, his outline drawings were like colouring book pictures and he'd draw giant outlines then get groups of kids to fill them in with their own pictures and words.
As he became more famous he was able to get his art into even more noticeable places; his famous painting 'Radiant Child' was put onto a huge billboard in Times Square, NY, he painted murals on the Berlin Wall, covered a car and even a hot air balloon with his art.
visit his website: www.haring.com