Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Georgia O'Keeffe created a series of paintings of skyscrapers in New York City between 1925 and 1929. They were made after O'Keeffe moved with her new husband into an apartment on the 30th floor of the Shelton Hotel, which gave her expansive views of all but the west side of the city. She expressed her appreciation of the city's early ...
Georgia Totto O'Keeffe (November 15, 1887 – March 6, 1986) was an American modernist painter and draftswoman whose career spanned seven decades and whose work remained largely independent of major art movements.
According to Fiske Kimball, structures such as the Ritz Tower "have emboldened imagination to conceive a city with lance-like towers set in open plots of greenery". [36] [157] [158] Georgia O'Keeffe also depicted the building in her 1920s painting Ritz Tower, Night. [159] The building continued to be critically appraised in later years.
Oct. 6—New York brought Georgia O'Keeffe fame. New Mexico brought her freedom. ... Oct. 20, at the city's Center for Contemporary Art and the New Mexico History Museum, respectively. Danes ...
In 1930, Georgia O'Keeffe created 54 works, some of which were created in Maine and New York, though the majority were completed in New Mexico. [4] In April of that year, she continued her exploration of natural forms in Maine, expanding on her ongoing shell series first initiated in the 1920s (Shell and Old Shingle I, Shell and Old Shingle VII, 1926; Shell No. 2, 1928) and continuing ...
New York skyscraper paintings of Georgia O'Keeffe User:Jane023/Paintings by Georgia O'Keeffe File talk:Radiator Building – Night, New York (1927), Georgia O'Keefe.jpg
Sky Above Clouds (1960–1977) is a series of eleven cloudscape paintings by the American modernist painter Georgia O'Keeffe, produced during her late period.The series of paintings is inspired by O'Keeffe's views from her airplane window during her frequent air travel in the 1950s and early 1960s when she flew around the world.
O'Keeffe began painting the centres of flowers in 1924. [ 14 ] [ 15 ] The first show of her enlarged flowers was at the Anderson Galleries in 1926. [ 16 ] The black irises were a recurring subject: She painted another oil called The Black Iris (CR 558), also known as The Dark Iris No. II and Dark Iris , a small (9x7") oil in 1926. [ 17 ]