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  1. Apr 27, 2023 · Since 1946 its OKeeffe holdings has risen lackadaisically to 13 works, including five from the artist’s foundation and bequest in the mid-90s. But things change, and change brings “Georgia...

  2. News about Georgia O'Keeffe, including commentary and archival articles published in The New York Times.

  3. Mar 2, 2017 · March 2, 2017. Georgia O’Keeffe, the pioneering modernist artist, had sensibility to spare. She lavished it on her work, of course, but she applied nearly as much to self-presentation —...

    • Roberta Smith
  4. O’Keeffe called these works “my New Yorks” and through them investigated the dynamic potential of New York’s cityscape—the organic and the inorganic, the natural and the constructed. As she put it, “One can’t paint New York as it is, but rather as it is felt.”

    • Early life and education
    • Work
    • Discovery
    • Retirement

    Born on November 15, 1887, the second of seven children, Georgia Totto OKeeffe grew up on a farm near Sun Prairie, Wisconsin. She studied at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1905-1906 and the Art Students League in New York in 1907-1908. Under the direction of William Merritt Chase, F. Luis Mora, and Kenyon Cox she learned the techniques of traditio...

    Dows emphasis on composition and design offered OKeeffe an alternative to realism. She experimented for two years, while she taught art in South Carolina and west Texas. Seeking to find a personal visual language through which she could express her feelings and ideas, she began a series of abstract charcoal drawings in 1915 that represented a radic...

    OKeeffe mailed some of these highly abstract drawings to a friend in New York City, who showed them to Alfred Stieglitz. An art dealer and internationally known photographer, he was the first to exhibit her work in 1916. He would eventually become OKeeffes husband. By the mid-1920s, OKeeffe was recognized as one of Americas most important and succe...

    Suffering from macular degeneration and discouraged by her failing eyesight, OKeeffe painted her last unassisted oil painting in 1972. But OKeeffes will to create did not diminish with her eyesight. In 1977, at age ninety, she observed, I can see what I want to paint. The thing that makes you want to create is still there.

  5. Apr 8, 2020 · CNN — Frustrated, Frida Kahlo was finding that none of the letters she was writing felt quite right, and she tore them up, one by one. The young Mexican artist was penning a note to Georgia...

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  7. Apr 28, 2006 · Georgia OKeeffe was born in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin in 1887. The second of seven children, OKeeffe longed to be an artist from an early age. In 1905 she attended the Art Institute of Chicago...

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