The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Friday, May 24, 2013
 
The Whitney to Present Georgia O'Keeffe: Abstraction
NEW YORK, NY, .- The artistic achievement of Georgia O’Keeffe is examined from a fresh perspective in Georgia O’Keeffe: Abstraction, a landmark exhibition debuting this fall at the Whitney Museum of American Art. While O’Keeffe (1887–1986) has long been recognized as one of the central figures in 20th-century art, the radical abstract work she created throughout her long career has remained less well known than her representational art. By delving into her abstractions, Georgia O’Keeffe: Abstraction reconsiders O’Keeffe’s place as one of America's first and most daring abstract artists. The exhibition goes on view in the Whitney’s third-floor Peter Norton Family Galleries from September 17, 2009 through January 17, 2010.

Including more than 130 paintings, drawings, watercolors, and sculptures by O'Keeffe as well as selected examples of Alfred Stieglitz’s famous photographic portrait series of O’Keeffe, the exhibition has been many years in the making. The curatorial team, led by Whitney curator Barbara Haskell, includes Barbara Buhler Lynes, the curator of the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum and the Emily Fisher Landau Director of the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum Research Center; Bruce Robertson, professor of the history of art and architecture at the University of California, Santa Barbara; Elizabeth Hutton Turner, professor and vice provost for the arts at the University of Virginia and guest curator at the Phillips Collection; and Sasha Nicholas, Whitney curatorial assistant. The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue with essays by the organizers, selections from the recently unsealed Stieglitz-O’Keeffe correspondence, and a contextual chronology of O’Keeffe’s life and work. Following its Whitney debut, the show travels to The Phillips Collection, Washington D.C., February 6-May 9, 2010, and to the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum, Santa Fe, May 28- September 12, 2010.

While it may be that O’Keeffe’s art is often seen through the lens of female sexuality, she is viewed in the public imagination first and foremost as a painter of places and things. When one thinks of her work it is usually of her magnified images of open flowers and her iconic depictions of animal bones, her Lake George landscapes, her images of stark New Mexican cliffs, and her still lifes of fruit, leaves, shells, rocks, and bones. Even O’Keeffe’s canvasses of architecture, from the skyscrapers of Manhattan to the adobe structures of Abiquiu, come to mind more readily than the works made throughout her career that she termed ‘abstract’.

This exhibition is the first to examine the abstract side of O'Keeffe's achievement. In 1915, O'Keeffe leaped into the forefront of abstraction with a group of charcoal drawings that were among the most radical creations produced in the United States at that time. A year later, she added color to her repertoire; by 1918, she was expressing the union of abstract form and color in paint. First exhibited in 1923, O’Keeffe’s psychologically charged, brilliantly colored abstract oils garnered immediate critical and public acclaim. For the next decade, abstraction would dominate her attention. Even after 1930, when O’Keeffe’s focus turned increasingly to representational subjects, she never abandoned abstraction, which remained the guiding principle of her art. She returned to abstraction in the mid 1940s with a new, planar vocabulary that provided a precedent for a younger generation of abstractionists.

Abstraction and representation for O’Keeffe were neither binary nor oppositional. She moved freely from one to the other, cognizant that all art is rooted in an underlying abstract formal invention. For O’Keeffe, abstraction offered a way to communicate ineffable thoughts and sensations. As she said in 1976, “The abstraction is often the most definite form for the intangible thing in myself that I can only clarify in paint.” Through her personal language of abstraction, she sought to give visual form (as she confided in a 1916 letter to Alfred Stieglitz) to “things I feel and want to say - [but] havent [sic] words for.” Abstraction allowed her to express intangible experience—-be it a quality of light, color, sound, or response to a person or place. As O’Keeffe defined it in 1923, her goal as a painter was to “make the unknown—known. By unknown I mean the thing that means so much to the person that he wants to put it down--clarify something he feels but does not clearly understand.”

This exhibition and catalogue chronicles the trajectory of O'Keeffe's career as an abstract artist and examines the forces impacting the changes in her subject matter and style. From the beginning of her career, she was, as critic Henry McBride remarked, “a newspaper personality.” Interpretations of her art were shaped almost exclusively by Alfred Stieglitz, artist, charismatic impresario, dealer, editor, and O’Keeffe’s eventual husband, who presented her work from 1916 to 1946 at the groundbreaking galleries “291”, the Anderson Galleries, the Intimate Gallery, and An American Place. Stieglitz’s public and private statements about O’Keeffe’s early abstractions and the photographs he took of her, partially clothed or nude, led critics to interpret her work—-to her great dismay--as Freudian-tinged, psychological expressions of her sexuality.

Cognizant of the public’s lack of sympathy for abstraction and seeking to direct the critics away from sexualized readings of her work, O’Keeffe self-consciously began to introduce more recognizable images into her repertoire in the mid-1920s. As she wrote to the writer Sherwood Anderson in 1924, “I suppose the reason I got down to an effort to be objective is that I didn’t like the interpretations of my other things [abstractions].” O’Keeffe’s increasing shift to representational subjects, coupled with Stieglitz’s penchant for favoring the exhibition of new, previously unseen work, meant that O’Keeffe’s abstractions rarely figured in the exhibitions Stieglitz mounted of her work after 1930, with her first forays into abstraction virtually disappearing from public view.




Last Week News

May 10, 2009

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar Announces Reopening of Statue of Liberty's Crown

The New India at the Museum of Modern Art Celebrates Contemporary Indian Cinema

Avid Art Collector, Jonathan Demme, Curates Exhibition from his own Personal Collection

Sotheby's in Milan to Sell a Selection of Contemporary Works

Guggenheim Museum Web Site Wins Best Cultural Institution Webby Award

A Lost World Captured in Astonishing Detail in More than 80 Vibrant Paintings by Mayer Kirshenblatt

Artium Presents the Exhibition Dark is the Room Where We Sleep, by Francesc Torres

Storm King Launches Storm King Wavefield, Monumental Work by Maya Lin

Seripop, a Weekend Long Event of Printmaking, Illustration and Live Music, to be Held at Baltic

Ned Rifkin Appointed Director of The Blanton Museum of Art

Morphy Auctions Returns to its Roots, Co-founder Dan Morphy Buys Back Company's Operating Assets

Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art Publishes First Major Collections Catalog

Georgia Museum of Art Announces Lynn Boland as New Pierre Daura Curator of European Art

Academy of Art University Faculty & Alumni Shine in "Impressions of Italy" at Garden Gallery

Philbrook Museum of Art Receives Highest National Recognition

Special 3 Minute Wonders Focusing on The Art Fund to be Screened in England

Gibbes Museum of Art Announces Stephen Marc Winner of the 2009 Factor Prize for Southern Art

SFMOMA Opens Blue Bottle Coffee Bar in New Rooftop Garden

National Endowment for the Arts' 2010 Budget Submitted

London Teens to Perform Dance Inspired by National Gallery Collection at The Royal Ballet Schools White Lodge

May 9, 2009

Leger's Le cinq de trefle Achieves $1.1 Million at Christie's NY Impressionist and Modern Art

Avant-gardes '20 / '60: Highlights from the Stedelijk Museum Collection on Show

Seoul Auction to Offer Exceptional Western and Asian Contemporary Art in May Sale in Hong Kong

The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art Presentss George Segal: Street Scenes

Serralves Museum Celebrates Its 10th Anniversary With Major Exhibition and 40 Hours Party

Dennis Hopper On View at the Harwood Museum of Art

High to Present Exhibition on Work and Design Process of Atlanta Architect John Portman

City/Country: Photographs from the Henry V. Heuser, Jr. Collection To Open At Speed Art Museum

With You I Want To Live: The Museum of Art, Fort Lauderdale

18 Million Euro House by Enigma's Michael Cretu Torn Down by Bulldozers

John Busby Named Woodson Art Museum 2009 Master Wildlife Artist

The Craftsman and the Critic: Defining Usefulness and Beauty in Arts and Crafts-Era Boston

Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Presents "The Tsars and the East: Gifts from Turkey and Iran in The Moscow Kremlin"

Knoxville Museum of Art Presents Fourth Annual "Artists on Location" Paint Out and Sale June 5 - 7

London Design Festival Announces Plans for 2009

Raiford Guins: Use with Joystick Controller: The Stuff of Videogame History, A Lecture and Multi-Media Installation

The Aarhus Art Building: Open Call for Proposals

Zeit-Bikes and Beats at Tacoma Art Museum

May 8, 2009

The Art Gallery of Ontario Presents Surreal Things, Organized by London's V&A

Auckland Art Gallery to Receive Works of Art Including Paintings by Picasso, Cezanne, and Matisse

High will Premier New Exhibition of Digital Portraits by Photographer Robert Weingarten

Sotheby's to Offer Jusepe de Ribera's Darmatic Prometheus in Spectacular Single-Owner Sale

Record Attendance and Strong Sales Buck Recessionary Art Market Trends

Colby Museum of Art Celebrates 50 Years with Art at Colby

Major Retrospective Exhibition of Noted Modern American Painter Cleve Gray

VIENNAFAIR The International Contemporary Art Fair FOCUSED ON CEE 2009

Sotheby's Chinese Sale to be Highlighted by Fine Imperial Cloisonne Enamel and Gilt-Bronze Censer

Discover the Resilience of Humankind Response and Memory: The Art of Beverly Buchanan

Light Years: Photography and Space Opens at National Gallery of Victoria

DIA Art Foundation Announces Appointment of Yasmil Raymond as Curator

Return of the Original Bowling Throw Down Art Benefit - STRIKE III

Noguchi Museum Honors Leonard and Louise Riggio at Annual Benefit

VCU Students Named Javits Fellows

Frieze Art Fair 2009: Details Announced

Ohio University Explores Links Between Art and Terror

Sir Ken Robinson to Deliver Keynote Address at Rhode Island School of Design's 2009 Commencement

Judd Foundation Receives Unanimous Support of To Restore Donald Judd's Former Home and Studio

Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis Opens Carey Young: Speech Acts

Call To Artists - A Celebration of the Bow River

May 7, 2009

The Mind of Leonardo Offers its Visitors a Different Point of View of the Universal Genius

The Art Fund Prize for Museums and Galleries Short List for UK's Largest Arts Prize Announced

Works by Picasso and Giacometti Lead Christie's Sale of Impressionist and Modern Art

Richard L. Feigen Returns Ludovico Carracci's Depiction of St. Jerome He Unwittingly Bought

Jef Geys Presents an Entirely New Project Entitled "Quadra Medicinale" for La Biennale di Venezia

Portland Art Museum Debuts Gauguin Painting Donated by Trustee Melvin "Pete" Mark

Extraordinary Bronze Statue Excavated from Pompeii Goes on View at the Getty Villa

Two Exceptional Drawings by Georges Seurat Head Sotheby's Impressionist Modern Art Sale

Exhibition will Show the Old Masters and Contemporaries Turner Hoped to Rival and Surpass

"The Bend on Herengracht" on Display at the Rijksmuseum

The New York Public Library Acquires Robin Bowman and William Meyers Portfolios for Photography Collection

Michener Art Museum Celebrates 20th Anniversary with Exhibition of Collection Highlights & New Acquisitions

Monkman's Dance to the Berdashe Exhibited at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts

Exhibition Explores the Full Range of Peggy Preheim's Work through 55 Works from the Past Two Decades

Nasher Museum of Art at Duke Presents "Christian Marclay: Video Quartet"

The Boston Athenaeum Presents Treasures from its own Collection in a Special Summer Installation

Gems from the Royal Holloway Collection Shine This Summer at the Yale Center for British Art

The "Dubai Frame" Wins First Prize at the XI ThyssenKrupp Elevator Architecture Award

Glasgow School of Art Design Competition Attracts over 150 Entries from Across the Globe

National Postal Museum Celebrates Asian Pacific American Heritage Month with a New Online Featured Collection

Metro Academic Classical High School Dedicates New Sculpture After Two-Year Collaborative Project with the Contemporary

May 6, 2009

Stars Descend in New York at the Metropolitan Museum of Art 's Costume Institute Gala

Metropolitan Museum's Costume Institute Explores Role of Fashion Models as Muses of Recent Eras

Sale of Impressionist and Modern Art Totals $61,370,500, Picasso and Giacometti Go Unsold

Huntington's Art Collectors' Council Acquires Thomas Hart Benton Painting, Italian Terra-Cottas

Carlo Mollino's Prolific and Innovative Career on View at Sebastian + Barquet

British Art from the Collection of the late Mrs. Audrey Burton, O.B.E. will be Sold to Benefit Charity

Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2009 and Announcement of Elle Commission

MoMA Presents First U.S. Survey of Aernout Mik's Moving Image Installations

Artist Pipilotti Rist, Winner of the Second Joan Miró Prize

US-Cuba Thaw: Cooperative Photo Exhibition Builds Bridges

Interact with an Installation by Kim Waale and Leo Crandall at the Everson Museum of Art

Sotheby's to Offer High Quality Contemporary Art in Paris

Erie Art Museum Breaks Ground on $9 Million Expansion

Aperture Chooses Grand Prize Winner and Five Runners-Up for the Second Annual Aperture Portfolio Prize Competition

Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego Announces the First Annual Artification: Teen Artfest

The Getty Offers Free Family Fun this Summer

Smithsonian Photography Initiative Celebrates the International Year of Astronomy in May and June

Fleisher Art Memorial Features Artists Johanna Inman, Yvonne Lung and Constantina Zavitsanos

British Museum and Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Combine to Give London a Tropical Indian Summer Landscape

New Direction Unveiled at Institute of American Indian Arts

May 5, 2009

Exhibition of Naked Madonna Photos by Martin Schreiber Take England By Storm!

Exhibition Examines Polish Posters of the Cold War Era from the Museum's Collection

Amon Carter Museum to Exhibit Esteemed Private Collection of African-American Art

Jewish Museum Berlin will Expand into the Central Flower Market Hall

Christie's Presents the Best in Asian Contemporary Art with Two Vibrant Sales in May

Peter Fischli and David Weiss Present Are Animals People? at Reina Sofia Museum

Minneapolis Institute of Arts Sole U.S. Venue for Pre-Raphaelite Exhibition

New Wex Curators Talk Art Collecting in "Bare Walls" Event

Superb Examples of Roman and Greek Art Highlight Christie's Spring Sale of Antiquities

Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego to Host the San Diego Premiere of Shirin Nesha's New Film

Sotheby's To Sell An Historic Album Photographs Recording the First British Royal Visit to Saudi Arabia and Bahrain

India Art Summit 2009 Slated for August 19-22

Renowned Sculptor and Author Join Together to Support UNICEFs Life-saving Programs

Pentti Monkkonen's Temple of Dionysos, 2009 to Open at Socrates Sculpture Park

Inside the "Mexican Suitcase": International Center of Photography Announces the Completion of the Digitization

Deanna Lee Joins The New York Public Library as Vice President for Communications and Marketing

Boca Raton Museum of Art's Annual All Florida Juried Competition and Exhibition Returns

Electromediascope Curators Honored by Film Festival

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Jackson Pollock work "Number 19, 1948" sells for record $58.4 million at Christie's

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Belize City officials say ancient thirty-meter high Mayan pyramid razed for road fill

4.- Hidden drawings from Nazi concentration camp on display at Jewish Museum in Berlin

5.- Records fall at Sotheby's contemporary art auction; Barnett Newman painting sells for $43.84M

6.- Death mask of Napoleon to be auctioned at Bonhams' Book, Map and Manuscript sale

7.- New Yorkers unnerved by neighbor's voyeuristic photos on view at Julie Saul Gallery

8.- Rare Vincent Van Gogh sketchbook copies up for unprecedented sale at museum store and online

9.- Leonardo DiCaprio environmental art auction at Christie's New York tops $38 million

10.- Hong Kong cries fowl as giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman deflates

Related Stories



Important Judaica and Israeli & international art bring a combined $7.9 million at Sotheby's New York

Tunisia to auction ousted despot's treasures

Andy Warhol's Mao portraits excluded from the Beijing and Shanghai shows next year

China criticises French Qing dynasty seal auction

Christie's announces auction marking the first half century of the popular and luxurious interiors shop Guinevere

Nine new exhibits debut at San Diego International Airport

Rembrandt masterpiece "Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet" back on display at National Museum Cardiff

Amber: 40-million-year-old fossilised tree resin is Baltic gold

Egyptian artist Iman Issa wins the Ist FHN Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona Award

The main chapel of the Basilica of Santa Croce open for visits after five year restoration



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site