BIO
Georgia O'Keeffe was
born on November 15, 1887, the second of seven children, and grew
up on a farm in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin. As a child she received
art lessons at home, and her abilities were quickly recognized and
encouraged by teachers throughout her school years. By the time
she graduated from high school in 1905, O'Keeffe had determined
to make her way as an artist. O'Keeffe pursued studies at the Art
Institute of Chicago (19051906) and at the Art Students League,
New York (19071908), where she was quick to master the principles
of the approach to art-making that then formed the basis of the
curriculum‹imitative realism. In 1908, she won the League's William
Merritt Chase still-life prize for her oil painting Untitled (Dead
Rabbit with Copper Pot). Shortly thereafter, however, O'Keeffe quit
making art, saying later that she had known then that she could
never achieve distinction working within this tradition. Her interest
in art was rekindled four years later when she took a summer course
for art teachers at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville,
taught by Alon Bement of Teachers College, Columbia University.
Bement introduced O'Keeffe to the then revolutionary ideas of his
colleague at Teachers College, artist and art educator Arthur Wesley
Dow. Dow believed that the goal of art was the expression of the
artist's personal ideas and feelings and that such subject matter
was best realized through harmonious arrangements of line, color,
and notan (the Japanese system of lights and darks). Dow's ideas
offered O'Keeffe an alternative to imitative realism, and she experimented
with them for two years, while she was either teaching art in the
Amarillo, Texas public schools or working summers in Virginia as
Bement's assistant. O'Keeffe was in New York again from fall 1914
to June 1915, taking courses at Teachers College. By the fall of
1915, when she was teaching art at Columbia College, Columbia, South
Carolina, she decided to put Dow's theories to the test. In an attempt
to discover a personal language through which she could express
her own feelings and ideas, she began a series of abstract charcoal
drawings that are now recognized as being among the most innovative
in all of American art of the period. She mailed some of these drawings
to a former Columbia classmate, who showed them to the internationally
known photographer and art impresario, Alfred Stieglitz, on January
1, 1916. Stieglitz began corresponding with O'Keeffe, who returned
to New York that spring to attend classes at Teachers College, and
he exhibited 10 of her charcoal abstractions in May at his famous
avant-garde gallery, 291. A year later, he closed the doors of this
important exhibition space with a one-person exhibition of O'Keeffe's
work. In the spring of 1918 he offered O'Keeffe financial support
to paint for a year in New York, which she accepted, moving there
from Texas, where she had been affiliated with West Texas State
Normal College, Canyon, since fall 1916. Shortly after her arrival
in June, she and Stieglitz, who were married in 1924, fell in love
and subsequently lived and worked together in New York (winter and
spring) and at the Stieglitz family estate at Lake George, New York
(summer and fall) until 1929, when O'Keeffe spent the first of many
summers painting in New Mexico. From 1923 until his death in 1946,
Stieglitz worked assiduously and effectively to promote O'Keeffe
and her work, organizing annual exhibitions of her art at The Anderson
Galleries (19231925), The Intimate Gallery (19251929), and An
American Place (19291946). As early as the mid-1920s, when O'Keeffe
first began painting large-scale depictions of flowers as if seen
close up, which are among her best-known pictures, she had become
recognized as one of America's most important and successful artists.
Three years after Stieglitz's death, O'Keeffe moved from New York
to her beloved New Mexico, whose stunning vistas and stark landscape
configurations had inspired her work since 1929. She lived at her
Ghost Ranch house, which she purchased in 1940, and at the house
she purchased in Abiquiú in 1945. O'Keeffe continued to work until
the late 1970s, when failing eyesight forced her to abandon painting.
She then became a three-dimensional artist, producing objects in
clay until her health failed in 1984. She died two years later,
at the age of 98.
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