SunÂday marked 25 years since the death of GeorÂgia O’Keeffe, one of AmerÂiÂca’s foreÂmost artists. The anniverÂsary of her death coinÂcides with the beginÂning of Women’s HisÂtoÂry Month. So we figÂured why not offer a litÂtle piece on her.
Born in 1887 in Sun Prairie, WisÂconÂsin, O’Keeffe grew up knowÂing she wantÂed to be an artist. Though she received trainÂing in acaÂdÂeÂmÂic art and won prizes for still life paintÂings, she left paintÂing for a while to teach. But when a friend sent her experÂiÂments in charÂcoal to Alfred Stieglitz in New York (the two latÂer marÂried), he offered her her own show in his popÂuÂlar and avant garde StuÂdio 291. This all hapÂpened in 1916, and she would not stop paintÂing until her death in 1986, when she was 98 years old.
Known for her large scale and bold paintÂings of flowÂers and cityscapes, O’KeÂeffe found a perÂmaÂnent home in New MexÂiÂco where she paintÂed the shapes of the desert from bones to adobe churchÂes. She mainÂtained a unique and indeÂpenÂdent spirÂit, as illusÂtratÂed in this clip from a biogÂraÂphy filmed when she was 92 years old. (See above.) The curaÂtor of the GeorÂgia O’Keeffe MuseÂum in SanÂta Fe sums up O’Keeffe’s lastÂing influÂence, statÂing “in 1970, when the WhitÂney MuseÂum of AmerÂiÂcan Art opened a retÂroÂspecÂtive exhiÂbiÂtion of her work, she became the heroÂine of the femÂiÂnist moveÂment, thus posiÂtionÂing her in the limeÂlight, which she had first enjoyed in the 1920s. Whether or not artists workÂing since then have liked or disÂliked her work, they acknowlÂedge the fact that she estabÂlished a place for women in an areÂna from which women had traÂdiÂtionÂalÂly been excludÂed”…
For a quick introÂducÂtion to O’KeÂefÂfe’s work, watch SmarthisÂtoÂry’s video intro to the 1929 paintÂing, “The Lawrence Tree.” It gets that name because it was paintÂed on D.H. Lawrence’s ranch.