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  • 标题:Bright, Bold, and Beautiful: The Art of Georgia O'Keeffe - Brief Article
  • 作者:Eleanor Jones Harvey
  • 期刊名称:USA Today (Society for the Advancement of Education)
  • 印刷版ISSN:0734-7456
  • 出版年度:2000
  • 卷号:Jan 2000
  • 出版社:U S A Today

Bright, Bold, and Beautiful: The Art of Georgia O'Keeffe - Brief Article

Eleanor Jones Harvey

Her paintings of bleached white skulls and pelvises of deer, antelope, and cattle, floating ethereally against a backdrop of landscape and sky, create what one critic called a "vision of infinity."

GEORGIA TOTTO O'KEEFFE was born Nov. 15, 1887, to Ida (Totto) and Francis Cliyxtus O'Keeffe, three and a half miles southeast of the village of Sun Prairie, Wis. The second of seven children and the oldest of five daughters, O'Keeffe began her formal education in a one-room schoolhouse on the Totto property. In the winter of 1898, the seeds of her art career were sown when she began private drawing lessons at home with her grammar school teacher, a family boarder who instructed her from the popular Prang drawing books.

In the fall of 1903, O'Keeffe enrolled in Chatham Episcopal Institute in Virginia, a girls' boarding school. While attending Chatham, she studied art and served as the art editor for the school's first yearbook, submitting several of her humorous pen-and-ink caricatures. After graduating in June, 1905, she studied at the Art Students League in Chicago, winning a $100 prize for her still life, "Dead Rabbit with Copper Pot."

Unable to complete her studies at the Art Students League, O'Keeffe found work in Chicago as a freelance commercial illustrator, drawing lace and embroidery for newspaper advertisements. In 1912, she spent two years as "supervisor of drawing and penmanship" with the public schools in Amarillo, Tex. She explained how she taught her students: "I'd get them to draw a square and put a door in it somewhere--anything to start them thinking about how to divide a space."

In 1916, Alfred Stieglitz, photographer, modern art world impresario, and O'Keeffe's future husband, featured 10 of her charcoal drawings in a three-person exhibition in New York. O'Keeffe initially went to Stieglitz's gallery to protest their inclusion, but ultimately allowed the works to hang.

A retrospective of Stieglitz's photographs opened at the Anderson Galleries in New York in February, 1921. Among the prints first seen publicly were 45 portraits of O'Keeffe. Thousands attended in a two-week period, and she rocketed to prominence. Stieglitz subsequently presented a one-person exhibition of her art at the Anderson Galleries in January, 1923, which included 100 works in a range of styles and media, 90 of them displayed for the first time.

In 1929, O'Keeffe began to break away from the East Coast environment that had provided her primary inspiration for more than 10 years. A trip to northern New Mexico renewed a passion for sky, mountains, and magnificent vistas that she had first encountered when teaching in West Texas 15 years earlier. First in Taos, then at Ghost Ranch, and finally at her adobe home in Abiquiu, she expanded her series subjects to include bones and crosses that are such an integral part of the desert culture of that area. Her bleached white skulls and pelvises of deer, antelope, and cattle float ethereally against the backdrop of landscape and sky in what one critic called a "vision of infinity."

In 1971, O'Keeffe, suffering from macular degeneration, began to lose her central vision. Eventually, she was left with only peripheral sight. Later in life, she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Pres. Gerald Ford, and Pres. Ronald Reagan presented her with the National Medal of Arts. O'Keeffe died March 6, 1986, in Saint Vincent's Hospital, Santa Fe, N.M. According to her wishes, her ashes were later scattered across the landscape near Ghost Ranch.

An exhibition of her work, "Georgia O'Keeffe: The Poetry of Things," is on view at the Dallas (Tex.) Museum of Art through Jan. 30. It will travel to the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco (Calif.), Feb. 19-May 14.

"Poppy," oil (1927). Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg, Fla. The paradox of linking strength and monumentality to something as inherently delicate and temporal as flowers represents O'Keeffe's contribution to redefining the genre of floral still-life painting.

"Yellow Cactus Flower," oil (1929). Dallas (Tex.) Museum of Art. By the time this painting of a desert bloom was executed, the artist and flowers had become one in the public mind.

Opposite page: "Two Calla Lilies on Pink," oil (1928). Philadelphia (Pa.) Museum of Art. O'Keeffe used pink as the perfect color to set off the decorative, exotic shape of the callas and exploit the possibilities of a sexual interpretation--something she always tried to deny, but it is suspected she deliberatively provoked with this painting.

"Black and Purple Petunias," oil (1925). Collection of Maryellie Johnson. O'Keeffe painted year after year, color by color, as one would plant a garden. She sometimes planted beds of flowers just for study purposes.

Above: "Green Apple on Black Plate," oil (1922). Birmingham (Ala.) Museum of Art. Viewers often are startled by the utter simplicity of the design, the reduction to shape and color as the only factors that can carry aesthetic meaning.

Opposite page--top: "Bare Tree Trunks with Snow," oil (1946). Dallas (Tex.) Museum of Art. O'Keeffe was able to suggest the harsh winter's effect on foliage through the use of cold colors that echoed nature's desolation.

Opposite page--bottom: "Grey, Blue, Black, and Green Circle (Katchina Abstraction)," oil (1929). Dallas (Tex.) Museum of Art. O'Keeffe's evolution into abstractism shifted the aesthetic weight of her paintings from imitation to emotion.

Right: "Turkey Feathers in Indian Pot," oil (1935). Private collection. The sensuous shape of the pot complemented the unexpectedly brilliant colors of the feathers in this tightly composed work.

"Pelvis with the Distance," oil (1943). Indianapolis (Ind.) Museum of Art. The pelvis structure, seen close up and from a low perspective, assumes a towering presence over the distant mountain range.

Eleanor Jones Harvey is Consulting Curator of American Art, the Dallas (Tex.) Museum of Art.

COPYRIGHT 2000 Society for the Advancement of Education
COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Group

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