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Sunday, December 22, 2024 |
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Museum presents first major exhibition to explore connections between Georgia O'Keeffe and Henry Moore |
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Georgia O'Keeffe, Jack-in-the-Pulpit No. 3, 1930. Oil on canvas. National Gallery of Art, Washington, Alfred Stieglitz Collection, Bequest of Georgia O'Keeffe, 1987.58.2. © Board of Trustees, National Gallery of Art, Washington.
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BOSTON, MASS.- American painter Georgia OKeeffe (18871986) and British sculptor Henry Moore (18981986) are among the most distinctive artists of the 20th century. They have long been admired for their extraordinary distillations of natural forms into abstractionOKeeffes iconic paintings of flowers and Moores monumental public sculpture. Opening at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA) this fall, the major exhibition Georgia OKeeffe and Henry Moore is the first to bring these two artists together, using compelling visual juxtapositions to explore their common ways of seeing. Each artist experimented with unusual perspectives, shifts in scale, and layered compositions to produce works that were informed by their surroundingsOKeeffe in New Mexico and Moore in Hertfordshire, England.
Featuring over 150 worksincluding about 60 works by OKeeffe and 90 by Moorethe exhibition includes paintings, sculptures, and works on paper, as well as faithful recreations of each of the artists studios containing their tools and found objects. Organized by the San Diego Museum of Art, Georgia OKeeffe and Henry Moore is an unprecedented collaboration with the Georgia OKeeffe Museum and the Henry Moore Foundation.
Looking at OKeeffe and Moore together, we can see how both artists were inspired by and also made use of natural forms. OKeeffe hoped that her paintings would make people pay attention to things they usually overlookedthe soft gradations of a flower petal, the patterns within a landscape, or the shapes between two objects. As OKeeffe said herself, to see takes time. The chance to see her work in person is not to be missed, said Erica Hirshler, Croll Senior Curator of American Paintings.
Georgia OKeeffe and Henry Moore is on view at the MFA from October 13, 2024 through January 20, 2025 in the Ann and Graham Gund Gallery. Timed-entry tickets, which include general admission, are required for all visitors and can be reserved in advance on mfa.org or purchased at the Museum. Member Preview takes place October 912.
While many of our visitors here in Boston will know OKeeffes work and reputation well, they might be less familiar with Moore, one of the most important British artists of the 20th century. The generous loans from the Henry Moore Foundation allow us to recreate the artists studio and will really help bring Moore alive and show how found objects played a role in the creation of his large-scale public sculpture, said Courtney Harris, Assistant Curator of European Decorative Arts and Sculpture.
Through careful observation of their surroundings and the objects they collected, OKeeffe and Moore reimagined natural formsbones, stones, shells, flowers, and the land itselfinto dynamic abstractions. Each played with scale, exploring the effects of making small things large. They twisted and turned pieces in space, searching for balance, looking within their complex interiors, and exploring how objects transform the spaces around them. The exhibition presents their works both individually and in dialogue, presenting unique juxtapositions such as:
OKeeffes Red Tree, Yellow Sky (1952, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston) and Moores Working Model for Standing Figure: Knife Edge (1961, The Henry Moore Foundation): OKeeffe often envisioned how miniature forms might become monumental. In this painting she juxtaposed a small piece of wood against a distant landscape, conflating near and far, large and small. Moore similarly made a small thing enormous, inspired by the breastbone of a bird to create a figurative sculpture that twists in space and encourages viewers to walk around it.
Moores Helmet (19391940, The Henry Moore Foundation) and OKeeffes Jack-in-the-Pulpit No. 3 (1930, National Gallery of Art, Washington): This work by Moore was the first in a series of small sculptures with hollow shells that encased unique interior forms. OKeeffe similarly used a technique of enclosure in her painting of a deep purple flower with its complex interior and billowing leaves.
OKeeffes Pelvis IV (1944, Georgia OKeeffe Museum) and Moores Reclining Figure Bone (1975, The Henry Moore Foundation): OKeeffe plays with scale, depth, and perspective by showing an entire vista through the aperture of a sun-bleached pelvic bone. Her interest in simplification and negative space is mirrored in Moores reduction of the human figure to a simple curve. His choice of travertine, with its porous texture and off-white color, maintains its connection to his inspiration in a weathered animal bone.
There were many other artists active in the U.S. and Europe in the mid-20th century who also looked to nature. The MFAs presentation of Georgia OKeeffe and Henry Moore draws upon the Museums modernist collection to provide a broader context. OKeeffe and Moores works are put into dialogue with photographs, prints, sculpture, and paintings by artists including Edward Weston (18861958), Alexander Calder (18981976), Barbara Hepworth (19031975), Arthur Dove (18801946), Jean Arp (18861966), Imogen Cunningham (18831976), and Maria Montoya Martinez (Poveka or Water Pond Lily), (Powhogeh Owingeh [San Ildefonso Pueblo]) (18871980).
At the core of the exhibition are recreations of the artists studios, built with original contents from OKeeffes Ghost Ranch studio in the hills of New Mexico and Moores Bourne Maquette Studio in Perry Green, a small hamlet surrounded by sheep fields in Hertfordshire, England. Though both OKeeffe and Moore remained within reach of city life, the two artists worked in rural settings, both amassing large personal collections of animal bones, stones, seashells, and other natural materials that served as key sources of inspiration. These found objects can be seen in these spaces alongside tools, unfinished works, and plaster maquettes. The studio installations illuminate the heart of OKeeffe and Moores artistic practicessomething rarely made visible in museum spacesand create richer portraits of the artists by encouraging visitors to imagine how they worked and lived.
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