Georgia O'Keeffe Gallery


Red, White, and Blue
Sky
Cottonwood
Storm
White Rose with Larkspur
Shell
Green Patio Door
Leaves of a Plant

Biography


Bulletin Board


Renowned Art
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Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-1986)
O'Keeffe was born in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin. During the 1920s, her large canvasses of lush overpowering flowers filled still lifes with dynamic energy and erotic tension, while her cityscapes were testaments to subtle beauty within the most industrial circumstances. She married Alfred Stieglitz in 1922. For the next twenty years the two would live and work together, Steiglitz creating an incredible body of portraits of O'Keeffe, while O'Keeffe showed new drawings and paintings nearly every year at his gallery. When Steiglitz in 1946 died, O'Keeffe took up permanent residence Taos. In 1977 her she received the Medal of Freedom, and in 1985 she received the Medal of the Arts.
Comments about OKeeffe

nameButler Art
subjectCottonwood iii
messageCottonwood III offers a glimpse into the mind of Georgia O’Keeffe, arguably one of the most celebrated American artists of the twentieth century. Who, painting among the desiccated plains of the Southwest, drew upon spindly trees, desert flowers, and bleached animal skulls for her inspiration. This intimate response to the distinctive landscape and spirit of the Southwest frames all of her work.
Unlike the more typical bold, geometric forms O’Keeffe undoubtedly pulled from her study of architecture and cityscapes, Cottonwood III embodies her departure to a softer, more naturalistic style. These yellow cottonwood trees, by the riverbed near Santa Fe’s Ghost Ranch—where O’Keeffe lived, served as the perfect subject upon which to exercise this departure.
O’Keefe pursued an alternative to the more traditional realism of her earlier studies. Through experimenting with charcoal drawings she was able to forge a new path to abstraction that served her well throughout her career. Although known internationally for her distinct flowers and the iconic, female-centric work, the Cottonwood series is, perhaps, more symbolic of the early influence of American Impressionism

https://butlerart.com/portfolio-item/cottonwood-iii/
dateSunday October 11, 2020

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