Georgia O’KeeffeGrey Blue & Black—Pink Circle, 1929Oil on canvas, 91.4 x 121.9 cm Dallas Museum of Art,Gift of the Georgia O’Keeffe Foundation© Dallas Museum of Art Photo: Courtesy Dallas Museum of Art
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Georgia O’Keeffe on view at the Fondation Beyeler photostory

The Fondation Beyeler devoted the first exhibition of its 25th anniversary year to Georgia O’Keeffe (1887– 1986), one of the most significant painters and an icon of modern American art. With 85 works from mainly  American public and private collections, “Georgia O’Keeffe” offers a representative overview of this  exceptional artist’s many-faceted and endlessly surprising work. The retrospective provides European viewers with a rare opportunity for such in-depth exploration of Georgia O’Keeffe’s work, which is hardly  represented in collections outside the United States. 

The exhibition at the Fondation Beyeler highlights O’Keeffe’s distinctive way of contemplating her  environment and translating her perceptions into wholly unprecedented images of reality – at times almost  abstract, at times close to their model in nature. “One rarely takes the time to really see a flower. I have  painted it big enough so that others would see what I see.” This quote from 1926 can be viewed as a  guiding thread when considering O’Keeffe’s art and life. O’Keeffe developed a highly distinctive visual  language, shifting between abstraction and figuration, which to this day has lost none of its topicality. Her  singular gaze, combined with her delicate and respectful approach to nature, make Georgia O’Keeffe the  most significant and interesting landscape and nature painter of the 20th century. 

Georgia O’KeeffeBlack Mesa Landscape, New Mexico / Out Back of Marie’s II, 1930Oil on canvas, 61.6 x 92.1 cmGeorgia O’Keeffe Museum, Santa Fe, NM.Gift of The Burnett Foundation, 1997© Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / 2021, ProLitteris, ZurichPhoto: Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, Santa Fe / Art Resource, NY
Georgia O’KeeffeBlack Mesa Landscape, New Mexico / Out Back of Marie’s II, 1930Oil on canvas, 61.6 x 92.1 cmGeorgia O’Keeffe Museum, Santa Fe, NM.Gift of The Burnett Foundation, 1997© Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / 2021, ProLitteris, ZurichPhoto: Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, Santa Fe / Art Resource, NY

O’Keeffe’s art and life

From 1918, Georgia O’Keeffe spent decisive years of her artistic development in New York City, at the heart  of the then fashionable and highly influential small circle around Alfred Stieglitz, photographer, gallery  owner and advocate of modern art. Next to providing an early venue for the display and discussion of the  European avant-garde, his gallery also fostered new American art and photography. O’Keeffe owed her  early recognition and subsequent career to the support provided by Stieglitz, who later became her  husband, and to her connection over many decades to the New York art scene. Yet in terms of her artistic  output, urban life left only very few discernible traces. 

O’Keeffe grew up on her parents’ dairy farm in Wisconsin, in the American Midwest. The decisive steps in  her artistic development took place in Charlottesville, Virginia, and later in Canyon, Texas, where she taught  art from 1916 to 1918. Even after moving to New York, her life as an artist remained punctuated by regular  stays in different places. During many years, she thus spent summers at the Stieglitz family’s holiday home  on Lake George in the State of New York, which provided the inspiration for much of the work she  produced during this time. In 1929, O’Keeffe for the first time spent several weeks in New Mexico in the  American Southwest, where she would henceforth return every year, always alone, and where she would  settle for good following Stieglitz’ death. 

Georgia O’KeeffeNew York Street with Moon, 1925Oil on canvas, 122 x 77 cmCarmen Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection on loan to theMuseo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid ©Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / 2021, ProLitteris, ZurichPhoto: © Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, VEGAP.Provenance: Carmen Thyssen-Bornemisza Collectionon loan at the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza,Madrid.
Georgia O’KeeffeNew York Street with Moon, 1925Oil on canvas, 122 x 77 cmCarmen Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection on loan to theMuseo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid ©Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / 2021, ProLitteris, ZurichPhoto: © Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, VEGAP.Provenance: Carmen Thyssen-Bornemisza Collectionon loan at the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza,Madrid.

The exhibition starts with a look at O’Keeffe’s early works

The exhibition starts with a look at O’Keeffe’s early works, produced during her time as an art teacher in  Virginia and in Texas. Charcoal drawings such as Early Abstraction, 1915, and No. 14 Special, 1916, are  shown alongside a selection of small-format, saturated and vibrant watercolours. Red Landscape, 1916/17, with its night sky lit up by a spectacular explosion that turns the barren hillscape crimson red, is one of the  rare oil paintings produced during these years. 

Subsequent works such as Blue and Green Music, 1919/1921, and Series I – From the Plains, 1919, manifest the artist’s path toward abstraction. Fundamentally, however, O’Keeffe’s work is defined by the  coexistence of figurative and abstract painting. Plants, especially flowers, provided key motifs in O’Keeffe’s  work. In her large-scale flower paintings, such as Jimson Weed / White Flower No. 1, 1932, one of the most  famous in this group, or Oriental Poppies, 1927, O’Keeffe’s interest in the movement of “straight  photography” becomes apparent.

Georgia O’KeeffeSeries I, No. 8, 1919Oil on canvas, 51 x 41 cmStädtische Galerie im Lenbachhausund Kunstbau Munich, Gift of theGeorgia O’Keeffe Foundation© Städtische Galerie im Lenbach-haus und Kunstbau Munich
Georgia O’KeeffeSeries I, No. 8, 1919Oil on canvas, 51 x 41 cmStädtische Galerie im Lenbachhausund Kunstbau Munich, Gift of theGeorgia O’Keeffe Foundation© Städtische Galerie im Lenbach-haus und Kunstbau Munich

The landscapes of  New Mexico

O’Keeffe found her most important sources of inspiration in landscapes and in the natural world; she  painted both figurative and abstract works based on landscape motifs, first on Lake George and later in  New Mexico. The works from her first stay in New Mexico, among them Ranchos Church No. 1, 1929, and Gray Cross with Blue, 1929, were inspired by typical elements of the region such as its adobe architecture  or the penitents’ crosses erected by a religious lay brotherhood. This is also the period in which she painted  Mule’s Skull with Pink Poinsettias, 1936, one of her famous paintings featuring the animal skulls she found  in the desert. During the years of the war, in which O’Keeffe lived permanently in New Mexico, her view of  the landscape shifted. In her two series Black Place I–IV, 1944, and Black Place I–III, 1945, she  represented the greyish black landscape in an unusually dark palette, from a bird’s-eye view and in ever  more abstracted form. The still life It Was a Man and a Pot, 1942, featuring a human skull, suggests that  O’Keeffe’s perception of her surroundings changed in the 1940s as the war raged on. 

Georgia O’Keeffe Jimson Weed / White Flower No.1, 1932 Oil on canvas, 121.9 x 101.6 cm Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas © Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / 2021, ProLitteris, Zurich Photo: Edward C. Robison III.
Georgia O’Keeffe Jimson Weed / White Flower No.1, 1932 Oil on canvas, 121.9 x 101.6 cm Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas © Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / 2021, ProLitteris, Zurich Photo: Edward C. Robison III.

Alexander Calder and  O’Keeffe ongoing relationship with Europe

In the last room of the exhibition, O’Keeffe’s late work comes face to face with Black Mobile with Hole,  1954, by Alexander Calder (1898–1976), whose work has long been closely associated with the Fondation  Beyeler – by way of both the museum’s collection and several exhibitions. While Calder, unlike O’Keeffe,  maintained an ongoing relationship with Europe, both artists shared a deep attachment to the wide  expanses and endless horizons of rural America, which permeate their work.  

During her own lifetime, Georgia O’Keeffe was considered a major exponent and co-initiator of new  American art as propagated since the late 1910s next to and distinct from the European avant-garde. In  1943, her first museum retrospective took place at the Art Institute of Chicago and in 1946, the Museum of  Modern Art in New York organised a large exhibition of her work, the first such display the institution had  ever devoted to a female artist. Most of O’Keeffe’s works are to be found in the United States, both in more  than 100 public collections and in private hands. In Europe, to which O’Keeffe herself travelled for the first  time in 1953 aged 65, only around a dozen works are held in private and public collections. Her first major  exhibition on the Old Continent took place in 1993 at the Hayward Gallery in London. One of the rare  exhibitions in the years that followed, and the very first to be held in Switzerland, was the retrospective  curated by Bice Curiger at the Kunsthaus Zürich in 2003. Today, Georgia O’Keeffe is also among the highly  recognised artists in Europe, even though the originals of her works are rarely to be seen here.  

“Georgia O’Keeffe” is curated by Theodora Vischer, Chief
 the Fondation Beyeler  
opening dates: from 23 January to 22 May 2022. 

The exhibition has been organised by the Fondation Beyeler,  Riehen/Basel, the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid, and the Centre Pompidou, Paris, in  partnership with the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, Santa Fe. 

(based on the press information)

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