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She finished her last unassisted oil paintings in 1972. In one, Black Rock with Blue Sky and White Clouds, a stone dominates the canvas, a sliver of blue sky and clouds behind it. In another, The Beyond, a wide band of darkness at the bottom of the canvas creeps toward the horizon line."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"What do Georgia O Keeffe paintings symbolize?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Georgia O'Keeffe was a modernist painter, renowned for her distinctive enlarged flower paintings. Though she rejected efforts to prescribe specific meanings to her art, O'Keeffe's flower pieces frequently evoke themes of femininity, sexuality, and organic abstraction."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"What are some fun facts about Georgia O'Keeffe?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"
Georgia O'Keeffe Facts
More items...
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Georgia O'Keeffe- 10 Iconic Artworks
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Georgia O’Keeffe | Biography, Paintings, Art, Flowers, & Facts (2024)

American painter

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Written by

Barbara Buhler Lynes Curator, Georgia O'Keeffe Museum (1999–2012) and Emily Fisher Landau Director, Georgia O'Keeffe Museum Research Center (2001–2012), Santa Fe, New Mexico. Author of Georgia O'Keeffe and O'Keeffe,...

Barbara Buhler Lynes

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Last Updated: Article History

Alfred Stieglitz: photograph of Georgia O'Keeffe

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Born:
November 15, 1887, near Sun Prairie, Wisconsin, U.S.
Died:
March 6, 1986, Santa Fe, New Mexico (aged 98)
Political Affiliation:
National Woman’s Party
Notable Works:
“Black Place III”
“From the White Place”
“Jimson Weed/White Flower No. 1”
“Pelvis IV”
Movement / Style:
Precisionism
On the Web:
Artnet - Georgia O'Keeffe (July 24, 2024)

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Georgia O’Keeffe (born November 15, 1887, near Sun Prairie, Wisconsin, U.S.—died March 6, 1986, Santa Fe, New Mexico) was an American painter who was among the most influential figures in Modernism, best known for her large-format paintings of natural subjects, especially flowers and bones, and for her depictions of New York City skyscrapers and architectural and landscape forms unique to northern New Mexico.

Early years

O’Keeffe grew up with six siblings on a Wisconsin dairy farm and received art lessons at home as a child. Throughout her school years, teachers recognized and cultivated her ability to draw and paint. Upon graduation from high school, O’Keeffe determined to become a professional artist.

She first attended the Art Institute of Chicago (1905–06), and then she went to New York City to study at the Art Students League. O’Keeffe quickly became proficient at imitative realism, the approach to image making that formed the basis of all standard art-school curriculum at the time, and in 1908 she won the league’s William Merritt Chase still life prize for her oil painting Untitled (Dead Rabbit with Copper Pot) (1908). However, because she believed that she would never distinguish herself as a painter within the tradition of imitative realism, she abandoned her commitment to being a painter altogether and took a job in Chicago as a commercial artist.

While with her family in 1912, O’Keeffe attended a summer course for art teachers at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, which was taught by Alon Bement of Teachers College, Columbia University, in New York City. Bement acquainted her with the then-revolutionary thinking of his colleague at Teachers College, artist and art educator Arthur Wesley Dow. Dow believed in the Modernist idea that the subject of artists’ work should be their personal ideas and feelings and that these could be visualized most effectively through the harmonious arrangement of line, colour, and notan (the Japanese system of arranging lights and darks).

Dow rejected imitative realism and, in espousing the aesthetic of an Asian culture, his ideas most probably struck a familiar chord with O’Keeffe. She seems to have had an intuitive appreciation for this aesthetic, having been introduced to it through the art manuals she used as a student in primary and secondary school. Dow’s approach, then, in offering an alternative to imitative realism, rekindled O’Keeffe’s desire to be a professional artist. She subsequently worked with these ideas when teaching art in a public school in Amarillo, Texas (1912–14), and when working as Bement’s assistant during the summer at the University of Virginia (1913–16).

An emerging Modernist

In the fall of 1915, after a year of studying with Dow in New York, O’Keeffe accepted a teaching job in Columbia, South Carolina, at Columbia College. There, furthering her explorations of Dow’s principles, she sought a purely personal means of expression and turned to abstraction to produce works such as No. 3–Special (1915). In doing so, she transcended Dow’s teaching and became one of a handful of American and European Modernists who were working with this new and innovative approach to image making.

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Late in 1915 she mailed some of these drawings to a former classmate at Teachers College, who received them early in 1916 and immediately took them to New York City’s famous avant-garde gallery, 291, operated by photographer and impresario Alfred Stieglitz. Impressed with what he saw, Stieglitz included 10 of O’Keeffe’s drawings in a group exhibition at 291 in May 1916, and in April 1917 he sponsored a solo show of her work.

In the fall of 1916 O’Keeffe moved to Canyon, Texas, as the head of the art department at West Texas State Normal College. The work she subsequently completed there demonstrates her profound response to the vast plains and open skies of West Texas and particularly to the dramatic landscape configurations of nearby Palo Duro Canyon. Above all, her paintings of the period—most notably her watercolours, such as Sunrise and Little Clouds II (1916), Evening Star No. VII (1917), and Light Coming on the Plains No. II (1917)—reveal her continuing fascination with abstraction as a means of expression.

New York

Because of illness, O’Keeffe took a leave of absence from teaching in February 1918, and she later resigned her position to accept Stieglitz’s offer to support her painting activity for a year; she moved to New York that June. Although Stieglitz was married and nearly 24 years O’Keeffe’s senior, the two fell in love and began living together. They divided their time between the city and the Stieglitz family estate at Lake George, New York, and they were married in 1924 when Stieglitz received a divorce.

From 1916 to his death in 1946, Stieglitz worked assiduously and effectively to promote O’Keeffe and her art. He was alone among his peers in the 1910s in maintaining that American art could equal European art and in asserting that women could create art equal to that produced by men. However, he equated the creative process with sexual energies, and from the beginning he defined O’Keeffe’s work primarily in terms of gender, declaring her imagery the visual manifestation of a sexually liberated woman. In 1921 he provided visual equivalents for his ideas by exhibiting a large number of photographs he had made of O’Keeffe. Many presented her in the nude or in various stages of undress, sometimes posed in front of her abstract drawings and paintings while gesturing toward them with her arms and hands.

Stieglitz’s association of O’Keeffe’s abstractions with her body captured the imagination of the critics, whose reviews of her next exhibition—a retrospective organized by Stieglitz at the Anderson Galleries in 1923—were overwhelmingly Freudian. From then until his death, Stieglitz organized annual exhibitions of O’Keeffe’s work at the Anderson Galleries (1924–25), the Intimate Gallery (1925–29), and An American Place (1929–46), the latter two of which he operated himself. By the late 1920s O’Keeffe had become one of New York’s most celebrated Modernist artists, and Stieglitz had created a strong-enough market for her work that she enjoyed financial security and independence.

After her arrival in New York in 1918, O’Keeffe continued to produce abstract art, such as Red & Orange Streak / Streak (1919), which ranks among the most imaginative and provocative works of her career. However, in 1919 she also had begun to paint precisely delineated, recognizable forms, perhaps in response to her increasing awareness not only of photographic imagery but also of Stieglitz’s ideas about her work. O’Keeffe was a member of the National Woman’s Party, the most radical feminist organization of the early 20th century in the United States; as such, she rejected the essentialist notion that women inherently possess a set of particular character traits. Accordingly, she objected strongly to gendered interpretations of her work as well as to the sexualized public image that Stieglitz had created of her. In an attempt to reshape this public image, she began—after the Anderson Galleries exhibit of 1923—to promote herself as a serious, hardworking professional. In published interviews and in the photographs of her made by Stieglitz and other photographers, she began to cultivate a public image that was antithetical to the one Stieglitz had presented of her in his 1921 exhibition of her work.

Believing her abstractions to be the primary source of misreadings of her art, O’Keeffe moreover curtailed her production of such pieces and limited their inclusion in exhibitions of her work that Stieglitz organized after 1923. While she never abandoned Modernist abstraction as the underlying principle in her work, by the mid-1920s she had shifted its emphasis to redefine herself as a painter of recognizable forms, by which she remains best known today. Her subsequent depictions of recognizable subject matter were replete with the abstract shapes that she had earlier identified as her own in the 1910s, including ovals, hooked or V-shapes, and spirals. Her large-format paintings of flowers—precisely rendered and presented as if seen through a magnifying lens—were often declared by critics to be further proof of her female nature as the basis of her art; however, these works usually called attention to the centres of the flowers, which, for the most part, are androgynous and thus not exclusively feminine. As O’Keeffe addressed both natural and human-made forms in the 1920s, she produced some of her most distinctive paintings, such as Black Iris (1926) and Radiator Building—Night, New York (1927). Because all of her paintings speak to the Modernist aesthetic of “less is more,” and because many rely on manipulations intrinsic to photography, such as cropping and close-up views, they reveal her ongoing fascination with the photography, Modernist ideas, and the aesthetics of Asian art.

Despite the professional and artistic growth she experienced in New York, O’Keeffe knew by the end of the 1920s that neither the dynamism of the city nor the lushness of the Lake George landscape could sustain her creative efforts. Torn between her need to seek new stimuli for her art and her loyalty to Stieglitz, she decided to spend the summer of 1929 working on her art in New Mexico, which she had first visited briefly in 1917. There she rediscovered a landscape environment as exhilarating to her as the West Texas landscape had been in the 1910s; indeed, it would sustain her creativity for many years.

Georgia O’Keeffe | Biography, Paintings, Art, Flowers, & Facts (2024)

FAQs

What are some facts about the art of Georgia O Keeffe? ›

She is best known for her paintings of flowers and desert landscapes. She played an important part in the development of modern art in America, becoming the first female painter to gain respect in New York's art world in the 1920s.

How were Georgia O'Keeffe's flower paintings received in New York Brainly? ›

Explanation: Georgia O'Keeffe's flower paintings were initially met with mixed reviews when they were first exhibited in New York. While some critics praised her work for its innovative style and unique depiction of flowers, others were skeptical and even dismissive.

What did Georgia O Keeffe include in her paintings? ›

She was best known for her paintings of enlarged flowers, New York skyscrapers, and New Mexico landscapes. O'Keeffe has been recognized as the "Mother of American modernism".

When did Georgia O'Keeffe get married? ›

She moved to New York in 1918 at Stieglitz's request and began working seriously as an artist. They developed a professional and personal relationship that led to their marriage on December 11, 1924.

What is Georgia O'Keeffe's most expensive painting? ›

O'Keeffe holds the record for the highest price paid for painting by a woman; Sotheby's sold her Jimson Weed/White Flower No. 1 for $44.4 million in 2014.

How many pieces of art did Georgia o keeffe create in her lifetime? ›

Georgia O'Keeffe created more than 2,000 pieces of artwork in her lifetime. The oil paintings, sketches, watercolors, pastels, photographs, sculptures, and ceramic pieces have been organized hundreds of ways for exhibitions, storage, research, and more.

How did the critics describe O'Keeffe's paintings Quizlet? ›

Answer. Georgia O'Keeffe's paintings have been described by critics as ranging from soft and austere to detailed and evocative, often lacking visible brushstrokes and capturing her abstract interpretation of the American landscape.

What was the painting style of Georgia O Keeffe quizlet? ›

Georgia's artistic style is abstract.. That means her paintings do not look realistic. Georgia O'Keeffe studies art in schools in New York and Chicago. Her greatest inspiration was nature.

Where did artist Georgia O Keeffe live? ›

What was Georgia O'Keeffe's last painting? ›

O'Keeffe's post-macular artwork

She finished her last unassisted oil paintings in 1972. In one, Black Rock with Blue Sky and White Clouds, a stone dominates the canvas, a sliver of blue sky and clouds behind it. In another, The Beyond, a wide band of darkness at the bottom of the canvas creeps toward the horizon line.

What do Georgia O Keeffe paintings symbolize? ›

Georgia O'Keeffe was a modernist painter, renowned for her distinctive enlarged flower paintings. Though she rejected efforts to prescribe specific meanings to her art, O'Keeffe's flower pieces frequently evoke themes of femininity, sexuality, and organic abstraction.

What are some fun facts about Georgia O'Keeffe? ›

Georgia O'Keeffe Facts
  • Georgia O'Keeffe consistently battled against the Freudian interpretations of her flower series. ...
  • Flower paintings make up a small percentage of O'Keeffe's paintings. ...
  • She quit painting three times in her life.

What is Georgia O Keeffe's heritage? ›

Her parents grew up together as neighbors; her father Francis Calixtus O'Keeffe was Irish, and her mother Ida Totto was of Dutch and Hungarian heritage. Georgia, the second of seven children, was named after her Hungarian maternal grandfather George Totto.

What is Georgia O Keeffe's ancestry? ›

Georgia Totto O'Keeffe was born November 15, 1887, on a farm near Sun Prairie, Wisconsin. Her father, Francis Calixtus O'Keeffe was of Irish heritage, and her mother, Ida Totto was of Dutch and Hungarian descent.

What was Georgia O Keeffe most popular? ›

Georgia O'Keeffe- 10 Iconic Artworks
  • Sky Above Clouds IV (1965) | Georgia O'Keeffe. ...
  • Summer Days (1936) ...
  • Radiator Building — Night, New York (1927) ...
  • Cow's Skull: Red, White, and Blue (1931) | Georgia O'Keeffe. ...
  • Red Canna (1924) ...
  • Black Iris III (1926) | Georgia O'Keeffe. ...
  • 7 Future Trends in Schools and Classrooms.

What events were important in Georgia O'Keeffe's life? ›

  • Nov 15, 1887. Georgia Totto O'Keeffe was born. ...
  • Nov 15, 1902. Art education as a child. ...
  • May 1, 1905. Graduated from high school. ...
  • May 1, 1907. Change of plans... ...
  • Jan 1, 1908. O'Keeffe wins first award. ...
  • Jan 1, 1912. O'Keeffe teaches. ...
  • Jan 1, 1914. O'Keeffe returns to NY. ...
  • Oct 1, 1915. O'Keeffe begins to use watercolor.

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