Another, perhaps less well known, is German Dada artist and poet Kurt Schwitters.
Schwitters was a man of revolutionary talent who tipped the art world on its head. Niche at the time, his reputation has grown down the years.
Now, in the words of renowned curator Norman Rosenthal, "there is no artist working today that has not been influenced by Kurt Schwitters."
Schwitters was a pioneering member of the Dada movement, which began life in Zurich, Switzerland in 1916 and spanned art, poetry and performance.
Its purpose was to create a climate in which creativity was unrestricted by establishment values and redefine what was considered 'art'.
Hadid's quiet appreciation for Schwitters saw her utilize his philosophy and even lobby to save the artist's home from decay.
A century after Dada set the art world alight, she's celebrating Schwitters in one of her final, posthumous projects.
Reimagining the Merzbau
Dada's one hundredth birthday is ironic: a milestone for movement that actively opposed convention.
To mark the occasion, Pritzker Prize-winner Hadid designed an installation drawing on Schwitters' major work, the Merzbau.
The Merzbau, a giant, 3-D composition in Schwitters' house in Hanover, was a continually-shifting installation, a shrine to everyday objects to which the artist added over 16 years.
It was destroyed during World War II, as was a second Merzbau created in Norway -- leaving photographs of the jagged composition as the only evidence of Schwitters' living artwork.
But before Hadid's reimagining of the Merzbau could be realized, tragedy struck in March this year.
"We were very far along with the project -- let's say a year and a half in the making -- when she died," says Mathias Rastofer, CEO of Galerie Gmurzynska.
"At the funeral, in front of her grave, Patrick Schumacher [director and senior designer at Zaha Hadid Architects] and I hugged each other and cried and said 'now we have to finish the project'."
The exhibition space has been transformed to fulfill Hadid's intentions, featuring a curvy interior full of troughs and hollows that displays 70 of Scwhitters' works. It's quintessentially Hadid and a fitting homage to the man who influenced her.
Schumacher describes the space as "our Soft Merzbau," maintaining the principals of Schwitters' work while adopting the curvilinear forms Hadid was known for in the latter half of her career.
Dada at 100
Schwitters' retrospective sits within a wider celebration of Dada's 100 years in in Switzerland.
The affinity between the two artists clearly runs deep.
"Both of them were, as the French term goes, enfant terribles," says Rastofer. "They did not adapt to common practice and standards that were expected of an artist or architect at the time.
"Both of them were people who believed in their work, believed in their message and did not compromise or adapt to outside pressures."
For all the abstractions of Dada, "these two like-minded spirits," he says, "[are] in perfect harmony."