Georgia OKeeffe: To See Takes Time

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UPC:
9781633451476
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Hardcover
Publication Date:
5/16/2023
Release Date:
5/16/2023
Author:
Friedman, Samantha
Language:
English: Published; English: Original Language; English
Pages:
180
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A revelatory new volume on the American modernist's lesser-known works on paper, reuniting many serial works for the first time Recalling a charcoal she made in 1916, Georgia O'Keeffe later wrote, I have made this drawing several timesnever remembering that I had made it beforeand not knowing where the idea came from. These drawings, and the majority of OKeeffes works in charcoal, watercolor, pastel and graphite, belong to series in which she develops and transforms motifs that lie between observation and abstraction. In the formative years of 1915 to 1918, she made as many works on paper as she would in the next 40 years, producing sequences in watercolor of abstract lines, organic landscapes and nudes, along with charcoal drawings she would group according to the designation specials. While her practice turned increasingly toward canvas in subsequent decades, important series on paper reappearedincluding charcoal flowers of the 1930s, portraits of the 1940s and aerial views of the 1950s. Published in conjunction with an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, this richly illustrated volume highlights the drawings of an artist better known as a painter, and reunites individual sheets with their contextual series to illuminate OKeeffes persistently sequential practice. Born in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin, Georgia OKeeffe (18871986) first received critical attention when her breakthrough charcoal drawings were exhibited in New York in 1916. Two years later, she moved to the city to work full time on her art. Beginning in 1929, OKeeffe spent summers in New Mexico, where she would relocate in 1949. The most famous female artist of her age, she thought of herself not as the best woman painter but as one of the best painters.