
Series I - No. I, 1918
Before she became known as Georgia O’Keefe, the iconic painter of blisteringly sensual flower paintings and stark landscapes, she was just a young woman coming to New York from Wisconsin with dreams of being an artist. She wanted to free herself from inhibition — .to express all the feelings and seemingly inexpressible thoughts that were roiling inside of her. She studied art at Columbia University’s Teacher’s College under Arthur Dow, a specialist in Oriental art who taught that it was the artist’s personality that should come through a drawing, not just a realistic rendering of a subject.
In 1915, she emerged onto the New York Art World’s stage with a group of abstract charcoal works, whose purpose, she said in interviews later, were to translate into art what she couldn’t say in words – that it was through imagery and shapes that her thoughts would coalesce.
From there, she moved onto color, moving gradually from intense cobalt blues to hot pinks and lavenders – blossoming into the forms and flowers for which she later became known.
The Whitney is showing all these works – some not seen in New York since her first shows – along with some revelatory photographs taken of her by her lover and mentor, Edward Steichen.
Georgia O’Keefe: Abstraction is running till January 17. Don’t Miss It!
What a wonderfully written piece! So glad another entry was made into this log of NYC life!