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Sunday, December 22, 2024 |
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Georgia O'Keeffe exhibition opening this Friday at the High Museum of Art |
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Georgia O'Keeffe (American, 18871986), White Flower, 1929, oil on canvas, 30 × 36 in., The Cleveland Museum of Art, Hinman B. Hurlbut Collection, 1930.2162. © Georgia O'Keeffe Museum. Courtesy of the Cleveland Museum of Art.
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ATLANTA, GA.- Famed for her images of flowers and Southwestern landscapes, American artist Georgia OKeeffe (1887-1986) spent several years of her prolific career exploring the built environment of New York City with brush in hand. This fall, the High Museum of Art will be the exclusive venue in the Southeastern United States to present Georgia OKeeffe: My New Yorks (Oct. 25, 2024-Feb. 16, 2025). Featuring approximately 100 works across a range of media including paintings, drawings, pastels and photographs, the exhibition is the first to seriously examine how OKeeffes urban landscapes fit within the diverse context of her art.
Organized by the Art Institute of Chicago, the exhibition establishes these works not as outliers or as anomalous to OKeeffes practice but as entirely integral to her modernist investigation in the 1920s from her abstractions and still lifes at Lake George in upstate New York and beyond to her works upon arriving in the Southwest in 1929.
Most of our visitors likely know OKeeffe best for her floral paintings and works focused on the American Southwest, including her 1919 painting Red Canna, one of the most visited works in our collection, said the Highs Director Rand Suffolk. This exhibition offers the wonderful opportunity to highlight this important, but perhaps less recognized period of OKeeffes artistic life and demonstrate how her New Yorks exemplify her innovation as a Modernist.
In 1924, OKeeffe and her husband, photographer Alfred Stieglitz, moved to New York Citys newly built Shelton Hotel, then the tallest residential skyscraper in the world. Its soaring heights inspired a five-year period of energetic experimentation, across media, scale, subject matter, form and perspective. She created street-level compositions capturing the citys monumental skyscrapers from below and suspended views looking down from her 30th-floor apartment. She called these works her New Yorks and through them investigated the dynamic potential of New Yorks cityscape the organic and the inorganic, the natural and the constructed.
These New York paintings are essential in understanding how OKeeffe became the artist we know today. For this reason, the exhibition includes a significant portion of the artists New York paintings alongside select works that highlight her varied subject matter, including shells, flowers, abstractions and landscapes. This integration underscores how OKeeffe centered her New York works in her innovative and experimental modernist investigation of form, line and color an approach she continued upon her arrival in the Southwest. Additionally, the exhibition includes photographs by Stieglitz from the Shelton and other Manhattan high-rises, exploring the productive artistic dialogue that developed between them as each was inspired by their powerfully new urban environment.
The exhibition is curated by the Art Institutes Sarah Kelly Oehler and Annelise K. Madsen. The accompanying richly illustrated catalogue features a series of essays that present new scholarship and viewpoints on this formative group of works.
Georgia OKeeffe: My New Yorks was first on view at the Art Institute of Chicago in the summer of 2024 and will be presented at the High on the Second and Skyway Levels of the Anne Cox Chambers Wing.
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