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Thirty-seven years after her death, Georgia O’Keeffe remains best known for her signature paintings of flowers and bleached skulls. In 2014, one of her flower paintings sold at auction for $44 ...
Though Georgia O’Keeffe is most famous for her lovingly rendered close-ups of flowers—like Black Iris (1926) and Jack-in-the-Pulpit No. 3 (1930)—these make up just about 200 of her 2000-plus ...
For most, the name Georgia O’Keeffe inspires images of blooming flowers bursting with color. In cultural lore, the icon of feminist painting is a celebrated pioneer of color, a griot of the ...
If you’re at all familiar with Georgia O’Keeffe’s work, it’s probably because of her paintings: the sweeping New Mexico landscapes, the stark cow skulls, the close-up images of lush ...
During her years as a Texas schoolteacher, the artist discovered abstraction, Robert M. Coates writes. Then Alfred Stieglitz, at his popular picture gallery, 291 Fifth Avenue, discovered her.
Now MoMA wants to establish O’Keeffe’s modernist bona fides by defining her penchant for repeating images — landscapes, flowers, West Texas canyons, portraits, female nudes, evening stars ...
A photo of the artist's entryway displays her personality & penchant for the New Mexican desert – it sets the precedent for more unique design ...
Georgia O’Keeffe, Photographer is an exhibition of nearly 100 photographs, ... (1959–60), and “Salita Door, Patio” (1956–57). In these images the salita door becomes a black hole, ...
Before Georgia O'Keeffe made her home in Santa Fe, she found inspiration in Wisconsin. Here’s more information about the prolific painter.
Oct. 6—New York brought Georgia O'Keeffe fame. New Mexico brought her freedom. Among the multiple documentaries created about her, none have given the iconic artist the full biographical ...
T he photographer Todd Webb met Georgia O’Keeffe in the 1940s, at Alfred Stieglitz’s gallery An American Place. O’Keeffe liked Webb and his work, and they became friends for life .