The Phillips Collection presents Georgia O'Keeffe ~ Abstraction
Written by Gary Winters Saturday, 11 February 2012 22:30

WASHINGTON, DC - Although painter Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-1986), a central figure in 20th-century art, is best known for simplified images of recognizable objects, her contributions to American abstraction over the course of her long career were radical. Her approach-in paintings, drawings, and watercolors-was determined in 1915, when she decided that her art would record her feelings, rather than the appearance of things. For the remainder of her career, she looked to art, whether abstract or objective, to express emotions for which words seemed inadequate. On view through 9 May, 2010 at The Phillips Collection.
In her first abstractions, a series of non-objective charcoal
drawings,
O'Keeffe reduced her palette to black and white. She filled her
compositions
with fluid, curvilinear forms reminiscent of Art Nouveau. In 1916,
responding to
the elemental landscape of western Texas, O'Keeffe reintroduced color
into her
watercolors. By magnifying and tightly cropping her images, a framing
device
used by photographers, she found the means to express simultaneously the
vastness of nature, the immensity of her own response to it, and a
powerful
sense of being one with it.Two years later, seeking recognition as a painter in the circle of modern art dealer and photographer Alfred Stieglitz, she moved to New York and took up oils again.
Unwelcome critical interpretations of her work as expressive of her sexuality and a limited market for abstraction led O'Keeffe to turn away from pure abstraction in the 1920s and 1930s. After 1923, she rarely showed her early abstractions. Indeed, between 1935 and 1941, she produced no abstractions at all. Beginning in 1929, O'Keeffe spent long stretches of time in New Mexico, finally moving there in 1949. It proved to be an inexhaustible source of subjects for her mature works. She approached these as she had her most abstract works, through her feelings, using many of the same stylistic means. As she said, "I had to create an equivalent for what I felt about what I was looking at-not copy it."
Likely stung when critic Clement Greenberg trounced her in 1940 for
having
chosen representation over abstraction, O'Keeffe returned to it in1942,
painting
forms she found in the natural world that corresponded to abstract forms
in her
imagination. With the market more receptive to abstract art, she began
to
exhibit her abstractions again. By the late 1950s and 1960s she was
working
almost exclusively in an abstract style, in mural-sized aerial views of
clouds
and a minimalist, geometric series of patio door paintings. The fields
of color
of her radical late works set a precedent for a younger generation of
abstract
artists in the 1960s.Included in the exhibition are more than 100 paintings, drawings, and watercolors by O'Keeffe, dating from 1915 to the late 1970s, and 12 photographic portraits of her by her husband, Alfred Stieglitz.
In conjunction with Georgia O'Keeffe: Abstraction, co-organized by The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C., the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, and the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum, Santa Fe.
The courtyard includes two major works of art. Ellsworth Kelly's Untitled, 2005, is a large-scale bronze that was commissioned specifically for the courtyard. Mounted on the back wall, it is the first work by Kelly in the museum's collection.
Dual Form, installed near the gallery entrance to the courtyard, is a 1965 work by the British artist Barbara Hepworth. It was acquired by The Phillips Collection in 2006.
Visit : http://www.phillipscollection.
org/
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